Naylor v. City of Harrisonville

105 S.W. 1074, 207 Mo. 341, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 209
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 27, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 105 S.W. 1074 (Naylor v. City of Harrisonville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Naylor v. City of Harrisonville, 105 S.W. 1074, 207 Mo. 341, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 209 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

WOODSON, J.

— This suit was instituted' in the circuit court of Cass county by the plaintiffs, seeking to enjoin the defendants from the construction of a concrete sidewalk, four feet in width, along a nameless street, avenue, alley or public highway, on the west side of blocks 220 and 217, in the city of Harrisonville, a city of the fourth class.

There was a trial before the court, and the findings and decree were for plaintiffs, permanently enjoining the defendants from constructing the walk. In due time and in proper manner the defendants appealed the cause to this court.

[345]*345The facts are few and undisputed, and are as follows :

A copy of a plat bearing the heading, “Plat of the City of Harrisonville,” and recorded in the recorder’s office of that county, was introduced in evidence, and shows that the land upon which the city is built is laid out into squares, numbered from one to two hundred and thirty-six inclusive, and average in size about two hundred feet square; these squares face in four directions upon open spaces or strips of ground, unnamed, whieh vary in width, and run north and south and east and west through the entire length and breadth of the city, thereby giving the plat the appearance of a plat of a townsite, laid out into streets and blocks; but there are no statements appearing upon the face of the plat which show that the squares are blocks or that the spaces or strips of ground are streets. There are, however, various marginal notations on the plat explaining the plat, which refer to the squares and spaces as blocks and streets. The witnesses also refer to these squares and spaces as blocks and streets or alleys, and we will hereafter refer to them in the same manner.

There are twelve streets running north and south, and the same number running east and west. The two streets running north and south and the two running east and west through the center of the city are forty feet in width, while all the balance of them are only fifteen feet wide. The record discloses the names of but five or six streets in the entire city.

The witnesses refer to the four broad streets as “streets” in contradistinction to the narrow ones, which they call “alleys;” but the plat shows no alley running through any of the blocks in the entire city.

The pleadings and oral testimony also show that comparatively all of the blocks which appear upon the plat have been subdivided into lots, and have been [346]*346sold to various persons, who have constructed houses and made other, improvements thereon, and that they occupy them as homes, and use all the streets in the ordinary manner in going to and departing from their homes; and the record discloses no other means of access thereto.

The exact time when this plat was filed does not definitely appear, but it was sometime between the years 1869 and 1880. These streets have been constantly used by the public as streets ever since the plat was filed; and the street proposed to be improved, and for the prevention of which this suit was brought, was accepted by the city on or before the year 1880, and it had a board sidewalk laid along same and in front of blocks 217 and 220, the property of plaintiff. That walk is still there and has been used by the public ever since its construction. The walk now proposed to be constructed is to replace that old board walk.

The public school is located near the southeast corner of the city, and one block south of the south end of the property of plaintiff. There is no way for the school children to reach the school and for the public generally to reach their homes and the various portions of the city except by traveling over the streets indicated upon the plat.

I. The respondents resist the construction of the sidewalk in question upon three grounds, as follows:

First. They contend that all of the fifteen feet, or narrow streets in the city, which includes the one upon which the walk in question is proposed to be constructed, are alleys and not streets belonging to the public, but are private ways belonging to the adjacent property-owners, and cannot be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation first having been paid therefor.

Second. That under the charter of cities of the fourth class, Harrisonville has no power or authority [347]*347to have sidewalks constructed along an alley of the city.

Third. That the city has no authority to make such improvements and assess the costs thereof against’ the abutting property without first giving the property-owners a hearing, and after it is ascertained that the property would be benefited by the improvements.

We will dispose of the legal propositions thus presented in the order mentioned.

Section 21 of article 2 of the Constitution of 1875 provides “that private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation. ’ ’

Under this provision of the Constitution it cannot be gainsaid that if the street or alley in question is not a public street or alley, but is private property belonging to the adjoining property-owners, then the city has no power to take or damage the same without first paying just compensation therefor; but if, upon the other hand, it is a public street belonging to the city, then the power of the city to have it improved, we presume, will not be questioned. So, this brings us to the vital question presented by this record, and that is, is the street which is proposed to be improved public or private property?

’ We might observe in the first place that the mere fact that most of the witnesses and counsel have referred to the narrow streets appearing upon the plat as “alleys,” has but little or no significance in the determination of the character of the strip of ground upon which the sidewalk is proposed to be laid. This is one of the cases where ‘ ‘ there is nothing in a name; a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.”

Coming directly to the question in hand. It should be observed that the plat of Harrisonville introduced in evidence in no manner indicates that the narrow streets appearing thereon are alleys, nor that the broad [348]*348ones are streets. It is perfectly silent upon those matters, except some marginal notes which will be later mentioned. The four broad streets appearing thereon are indicated to be forty feet in width by the figures “40” printed at each end thereof, while the width of all the rest is indicated by the figures “15” also printed at each end thereof.

The plat also shows that all of the blocks appearing thereon have their four sides facing upon these streets, and that none of them run through or bisect any of the blocks. The blocks of ground numbered in the plat were sold to various persons, according to the plat, as facing upon these streets, and they have been built upon and otherwise improved as residence and business property by the purchasers.

The evidence shows that many years ago the city took charge of these streets and improved many of them, the one in question being among the number, and threw them open to the traveling public.

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Bluebook (online)
105 S.W. 1074, 207 Mo. 341, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/naylor-v-city-of-harrisonville-mo-1907.