Ober v. City of Minneapolis

229 N.W. 794, 179 Minn. 495, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 1138
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 14, 1930
DocketNo. 27,706.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 229 N.W. 794 (Ober v. City of Minneapolis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ober v. City of Minneapolis, 229 N.W. 794, 179 Minn. 495, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 1138 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

Holt, J.

Plaintiff appeals from the order denying a new trial.

The action is for the recovery of possession in the city of Minneapolis of that part of a tunnel under an alley abutting the rear of plaintiff’s 33.15-foot lot, the tunnel having been constructed and used up to December 1, 1928, by the defendant brewing company for transporting cases of bottles by a gravity conveyor from its bottling building, located on one side of plaintiff’s lot, to its warehouse on the other side thereof. The city is made a party defendant. The brewing company’s buildings are large structures of several stories, the ground dimensions being 157 feet by 156 feet and 157 feet by 132 feet, respectively. Plaintiff’s lot since 1920 has been unoccupied and has no improvements. The street is occupied by several industrial railroad tracks and impassable. Defendants •pleaded in defense an ordinance of the city granting the brewing company the right to construct, maintain, and use an underground tunnel under the half of the alley abutting its and plaintiff’s lots, pprsuant to the terms and conditions of which the tunnel was constructed in October, 1919. The court found that plaintiff had ■knowledge of the construction of the tunnel but that neither she nor the public has ever used it or demanded access thereto. The court also made this finding:

“In the regular course of its business, and especially during about three months of each year, it has been the practice of the defendant Minneapolis Brewing Company to transport between its warehouse and bottling house a large number of cases of bottles, such transportation being a necessary and proper incident of its business. Prior to the construction of said tunnel the convenient and customary course of such transportation was through and along the sur *497 face of said alley. Since the tunnel became available the cases have been transported through it and the surface of the alley has been proportionately relieved of public traffic.”

The court found that plaintiff has sustained no damage. This conclusion of law followed:

“That the construction, maintenance and use of said tunnel by the defendant Minneapolis Brewing Company * * have not constituted and do not now constitute an additional servitude upon plaintiff’s land, but have been and are an occupation and use of said alley in aid of the lawful public use thereof.”

The purpose of the tunnel as stated in the ordinance was therein to lay pipes and wires to convey heat, light, steam and other commodities sold and furnished other persons by the brewing company for which the city Avas to derive a revenue of five per cent of the gross receipts. The tunnel has contained no pipes or wires for the transmission and sale to others of light, heat, steam or gas. The city has derived no revenue therefrom. Only a gravity conveyor was installed and used in the tunnel. The ordinance on its face amounts to no more than a license to subject the subsurface of the alley to the ordinary street uses. Conduits for light, heat and poAver, like seAvers and water pipes, are noAv generally placed under the surface of public streets and are not considered as imposing additional servitude or burdens on the fee than those intended by the dedication. The public easement is not confined to the mere surface of the land dedicated as an alley or street. Appellant truly says:

“Water mains, seAvers and gas pipes play their part as an auxiliary to the one time wagon supplying those needs; and the uses as such for public service are embedded as closely to the surface as reasonably practicable. * * * Use varies with form. The essence of travel is locomotion.”-

But Ave cannot agree to this claim or conclusion:

“Manifold as to mode, manner and method is its use; fixedly unalterable is its place — the highway, upon and not under or above it.”

*498 Cater v. N. W. Tel. Exch. Co. 60 Minn. 539, 63 N. W. 111, 28 L. R. A. 310, 51 A. S. R. 543, supports the first statement quoted but rejects the last, and so does Coburn v. New Tel. Co. 156 Ind. 90, 59 N. E. 324, 52 L. R. A. 671; Peabody v. City of Boston, 220 Mass. 376, 107 N. E. 952, L. R. A. 1915F, 1005; 4 McQuillin, Mun. Corp. (2 ed.) § 1448, and authorities there cited. We do not think the authorities cited by appellant sustain a different view. Matter of City of New York, 215 N. Y. 109, 109 N. E. 104, L. R. A. 1916A, 1290, Ann. Cas. 1917A, 119, involved occupation of a street with railroad tracks by a contractor in building a subway under the same whereby abutters were specially injured. Bradley v. Degnon Contracting Co. 224 N. Y. 60, 120 N. E. 89, related to the question whether consequential damages resulting to an abutting owner from the building and operation of a subway railway were included in the damages for opening the street under which the subway was laid. Nothing in those cases, nor in Yale University v. City of New Haven, 104 Conn. 610, 134 A. 268, 47 A. L. R. 667, upon which appellant especially relies, can be construed as denying the right of the city of Minneapolis to grant the license to install the instrumentalities designated in the ordinance in the subsurface of this alley. The municipality in whose care and control are its streets may appropriate for use to the exclusion of the abutter not only the surface thereof but “so much of the depth as may not unfairly be used as streets are used.” Cloverdale Homes v. Town of Cloverdale, 182 Ala. 419, 435, 62 So. 712, 717, 47 L.R.A. (N.S.) 607, ivhere a private corporation had by permission of the municipality placed gas mains and water mains in streets without consent of the abutters. Thompson v. Hance, 174 Cal. 572, 163 P. 1021, involved taxation for construction of a tunnel through a high hill, the tunnel not even conforming to the street over the hill. The question of additional servitude upon the abutting property was not raised.

Now as to the case at bar. Under the general power of the city over its streets,- we think the construction of a tunnel for travel under the street could have been authorized if accessible to the public. (But this is no such passageway. As used in the past it was essentially for private convenience though at times it served to relieve *499 the alley of the excessive use required if the company had had to carry their cases along its surface from the one building to the other. The street in front, because of the railroad tracks, was not available. However we are not holding that the necessities of the brewing company nor the aid afforded public travel along the alley justified the ordinance or the construction of the tunnel adjacent to plaintiff’s lot for that was not the purpose indicated in the ordinance. But we are inclined to the view that as the ordinance reads it licensed an ordinary subsurface use of the alley. A court of high standing has so held.

In Wood v. McGrath, 150 Pa. 451, 24 A. 682, 16 L. R. A. 715, the defendant had obtained permission to lay a private drain in a street past the premises of the plaintiff, an abutting owner, without his consent. The plaintiff brought suit for injunction to restrain the use of the drain claiming that it was a nuisance. Eeferring to Borough of Susquehanna Depot v. Simmons, 112 Pa. 384, 5 A. 434, 56 Am. R. 317, and a prior case, the decision proceeds [150 Pa. 455]:

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42 N.W.2d 809 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
229 N.W. 794, 179 Minn. 495, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 1138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ober-v-city-of-minneapolis-minn-1930.