Mayor of Frostburg v. Hitchins

59 A. 49, 99 Md. 617, 1904 Md. LEXIS 101
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 16, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 59 A. 49 (Mayor of Frostburg v. Hitchins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor of Frostburg v. Hitchins, 59 A. 49, 99 Md. 617, 1904 Md. LEXIS 101 (Md. 1904).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Allegany County in favor of the appellees as plaintiffs in an action of trespass quare clausum fregit. The trespass forming the basis of the suit was the forcible removal by the appellant of an elevated structure erected across an alley way located on a lot of ground owned by the appellees on Main street in the town, of Frostburg.

The alley, which lies entirely within the boundaries of the appellees’, lot, was called for in a deed of the lot, made in the year 1852, to J. S. Welsh under whom the appellees claim title, and it has been freely used by the public as an alley ever since that time. It does not appear from the record that the appellant ever acquired title to the alley or the land under it or ever accepted its dedication, to public use either by formal corporate action or by the transactions of any authorized public department or official.

About eighteen years prior to the institution of this suit Feter Payne, who at that time owned the lot and had his dwelling-house on one side of the alley and kept a hotel on th,e other side of it, erected the frame structure now in question over the alley for a distance of thirty-six feet at an elevation of ten or eleven feet above the surface of the land. This structure contained three rooms and extended entirely across the alley, which was sixteen feet wide. It communicated with the second story of both the residence and the hotel although it was not built into either of them but rested upon wooden posts six inches square set up along the two sides of the alley against the hotel and the dwelling. At the institution of this suit and for sometime prior thereto the three rooms over the alley along with other rooms adjacent thereto were rented to the Young Mens’ Christian Association and used for its headquarters.

*625 The elevated structuré so erected above the alley was used arid enjoyed by the successive owners of the lot without objection on the part of any one until July the 19th, 1895. On that date, the appellees being about to close the alley entirely by erecting a building on its surface underneath the elevated structure, the appellant jointly with certain individuals owning lands in proximity to the alley filed a bill in equity in the Circuit Court of Allegany County praying for an injunction prohibiting the appellees from erecting their contemplated building on the surface of the alley and requiring them to remove the elevated structure erected above it. The appellees answered the bill asserting that they were the exclusive owners of the bed of the alleged alley and denying that the public had a right to use it for any purpose. A final decree was passed in that case, in due course on September 18th, 1895, enjoining the appellees from closing the bed of the alley by the erection thereon of their contemplated building, but they were not required to remove the elevated structure built above the alley nor was any mention of or allusion to that structure made in the decree.

On. April 20th, 1903, the appellant by a formal resolution declared the elevated structure to be a nuisance and gave written notice to the appellees to remove it within sixty days or the municipality would tear it down. This notice not having been complied with, the appellant on June 30th, 1903, forcibly tore down and removed the structure and in so doing injured to some extent the plaintiff’s adjoining house. The appellees thereupon brought the present suit in trespass quare clausum fregit and recovered the judgment against the appellant from which the present appeal was taken.

There is evidence in the record tending to show that the elevated structure obstructed to some extent the light and air in the portion of the alley lying below it and that vehicles of exceptional heighth were unable to pass under it; also that persons and vehicles gathered under it in wet weather for shelter and that nuisances were sometimes committed there by ill-behaved persons. It also appears that the charter of *626 Frostburg confers uppn the Mayor and Councilmen a general power to remove nuisances and obstructions from the streets lanes and alleys of the town.

The record contains eleven bills of exception of which ten relate to rulings upon questions of evidence and the eleventh is to Court's action upon the prayers offered by the respective parties to the suit. We will consider the last exception first, as it is vital to the issue presented by the record.

The plaintiff’s first prayer asserted the proposition that if the jury found that the plaintiffs were the owners of the lot of ground over a part of which the elevated structure was erected and that the defendant by its agents or servants entered upon. the lot and tore down the structure and injured the other improvements on the .lot the plaintiffs were entitled to recover even though the jury^should'find that there was an alley way reserved over the portion of the lot lying under the structure and that the public had been accustomed to use the alleyas a public way ever since the year 1857, unless the jury further found that the structure at the time of its removal formed such an obstruction to public travel in the manner in which, said alley had been" accustomed to be used as to constitute the structure a nuisance.

We find no error in this' proposition of which the appellant can complain. In the case of New Windsor v. Stocksdale, 95 Md. 196, both the form of action and the issue raised by the pleadings were the same as in the present case and the principles held by the very full opinion there filed to have been the. controlling ones in that case are conclusive of this one. In Stocksdale’s case the town of New Windsor was sued in tresT pass qitare clausum fregit for entering upon an alley which the public were entitled to use over the plaintiffs’ land and removing therefrom certain door steps attached to her house, which had by corporate action of the municipality been declared to constitute a nuisance. ' The plaintiff recovered a judgment in the. case and upon the appeal of the defendant we held that as it did not appear that the. alley had ever been conveyed to the ■town or that it had been dedicated to the public and accepted *627 by the municipality, the town authorities had no right to enter upon the alley and remove the steps. We there distinguished between the right of the public to use the alley and the authority claimed by the municipality to enter upon the alley and remove the alleged obstruction after having first by corporate action declared it to constitute a nuisance. In support of the views expressed in our opinion in that case we cited from the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States in Yates v. Milwaukee, 10 Wall. 479, the statement. “It is adoctrine not to be tolerated in this country, that a municipal corporation, without any general laws either of the city or of the State within which a given structure can be shown to be a nuisance, can, by a mere declaration that it is one, subject it to removal by any person supposed to be aggrieved or even by the city itself.

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Bluebook (online)
59 A. 49, 99 Md. 617, 1904 Md. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-frostburg-v-hitchins-md-1904.