Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Mauter
This text of 82 So. 487 (Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Mauter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
By its original petition in this cause, filed in this court April 23, 1919, petitioner Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company asks leave to file in the circuit court of Cullman, sitting in equity, its bill in the nature of a bill of review. The decree brought into question was rendered by the circuit court of Cullman, sitting in equity, on January 2, 1918, and was affirmed by this court November, 1918. By that decree the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company was commanded to abate an obstruction which it had caused in First street in the town of Cullman by lowering the grade of its roadbed at the point of its intersection with First street.
The new matter upon which petitioner’s *238 proposed bill relies is that since the decree in the former cause the dedication of so much of First street as lies across the petitioner’s right of way has been vacated by a proceeding had under and in accordance with sections 6031 and 6032 of the Code. Sections 6028, 6029, and 6030, to state them according to their general effect, provide that any person, desiring to subdivide his lands into lots, may cause a plat or map to be made, which plat or map, having been signed, acknowledged, and recorded, operates as a conveyance in fee simple of such portions of the land as are marked or noted on such plat or map as donated or granted to the public. Sections 6031 and 6032 provide for the vacation of any such plat or map by the execution and recordation of an instrument declaring the same to be vacated, and if any street or alley, shown by the plat or map, is within the limits of any municipality, “the assent of the mayor and alderman, or other governing body of the municipality, must be procured.” We have said that petitioner alleges its revor cation in accordance with the statute of so much of First street as lay across its right of way, alleging in a way its previous dedication of that part of the street. The petition is sworn to, as it should have been, and respondent Mauter has filed counter affidavits. In Dexter v. Arnold, supra, Judge Story said:
“This course, though not very common, is, as I conceive, perfectly within the range of the authority of the court; * * * and may be indispensable for a just exercise of its functions, in granting or withholding the review. If, indeed, it were doubtful, in case the bill of review should be allowed, whether the defendants could by plea or answer traverse the allegation in such bill, that the matter of fact is new, I should not hesitate • to inquire, in the most ample manner, into the truth of such allegation, before the bill was granted, in order to prevent gross injustice. But as every such bill of review must contain an allegation that the matter of fact is new, it seems to me clear upon principle that, as it is vital to the relief, it is traversable by plea or answer, and must be proved, if not admitted at the hearing.”
The judgment of the court is that Mauter’s objections to the petition for leave to file a bill of review are well taken and that leave should be denied.
It is so ordered.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
82 So. 487, 203 Ala. 237, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-n-r-co-v-mauter-ala-1919.