Snyder v. President of Rockport

6 Ind. 237
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 30, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 6 Ind. 237 (Snyder v. President of Rockport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snyder v. President of Rockport, 6 Ind. 237 (Ind. 1855).

Opinion

Perkins, J.

J.— Thomas T. Snyder and several others, property-holders in the town of Rockport, Spencer county, Indiana, filed a bill praying an injunction upon the president and trustees of said town, restraining them from mailing a certain improvement which they had undertaken. The bill was dismissed below for want of equity.

The bill alleges, in substance, that the town of Rockport is situated upon the bank of the Ohio river, seventy-five feet above the water; that the main street of said town, ninety feet wide, extends from the river outward, descending somewhat as it extends; that the plaintiffs own the lots upon said street on the river bluff, and that the trustees of the town are about to have said main street graded, filling the end back from the river and cutting down the end upon the river, through the bluff of seventy-five feet, so as to open a communication, by said street, between the town and the river, and also furnish a landing for steamboats, &c., at its termination. The plaintiffs in the bill object to the proceeding, and pray the Court to arrest it by injunction for the following reasons:

1. That it will greatly injure their property.

2. That the corporation does not propose to pay them damages, and is utterly unable to make such payment, if it was even willing.

3. The project, if carried into effect, would be of no utility.

We extract from the bill.

“ Your complainants are informed and believe that it is not the intention of the corporation to complete the entire work during the present year, but to go on with the work, from year to year, as they shall be able to collect taxes for that purpose. Your complainants further show that the [239]*239proposed grading of main street by digging through that immense bluff and building the wharf at the place contemplated, is utterly impracticable and visionary, and, in the belief of yom- complainants, impossible, with the limited means at the command of this feeble corporation, the whole town interested in the work containing only about seven hundred inhabitants, already taxed to the extent of their ability to pay; that the water in front of the town, and at the proposed wharf, is shoal, and, during the season of low water, the landing is dangerous for steamboats, the bottom and shore of the river being composed of rocks and interspersed with large logs, many of them large and detached; that the proposed cut through the bluff, at the highest point, which is at or near the corner of main and front streets, for the purpose proposed, will be at least forty feet in depth, and that fifteen feet will be and is a solid sand rock, or nearly solid; and that the proposed grade and cut through the bluff, will be of no conceivable benefit, unless it is excavated deep enough for a wharf. It is pretended by the corporation, and those who are interested in destroying the property of complainants, that this grading is necessary to procure earth to fill up the lowest part of main street; but your complainants allege, and the corporation well know, that a sufficient quantity of earth for that purpose can be procured in other parts of the town, upon the same bluff, equally convenient, without injury to any one’s rights of property.”

Such are the facts of the case. We now inquire as to the law arising upon them.

The act for the incorporation of towns, 1 R. S. 1852, p. 482, by which Rockport is governed, in section 22, empowers the board of trustees thereof—“ Ninth. To lay out, open, grade and otherwise improve the streets, alleys, sewers, sidewalks, and crossings, and keep them in repair, and to vacate the same.” And by section 46 it provides that, “ Whenever two-thirds of all the resident owners, in number or in value, of real estate bounding both sides of any street not less than one square, shall petition to have such street graded, paved, or otherwise improved, or the side[240]*240walks thereof built or repaired; or when two-thirds of the owners of real estate, in number or in value, on one side of such street, shall desire a sidewalk on that side, it shah be the duty of such board to levy, and cause to be collected, ^ tax upon the owners of real estate, or lots on such street or part of a street, according to the last assessed valuation of said real estate, such a sum of money as is necessary for the improvement of said street or sidewalk, as in said petition requested.”

The bill does not pretend but that all the requirements of the statute have been complied with by the corporation in entering upon the proposed undertaking, and it is plain that the statute confers plenary power to perform it, so far as grading and improving the street is concerned, and that statute is constitutional. The People v. The Mayor, &c., of Brooklyn, 4 Comstock 419. We have, then, no question before us as to legality of corporate action, or the existence of corporate power touching the grading of the street, but only one as to expediency and manner of operation ; but as to the wharf there is presented a question of power.

The questions of expediency and manner, as to grading streets, are certainly left in the first instance to the property-holders and the trustees, and it would only be in a case of palpable abuse, if then, that a Court would interfere. The law says, that when a certain number of property-holders, on, &c., shall petition, the trustees shall assess a tax upon, &c., to make the improvement. It is not made, it will be observed, at the expense of the town treasury, but the property-holders on the street; and it would seem that a Court should not undertake to determine for them, in opposition to their own judgments, their ability to accomplish what their convenience and public spirit might induce them to undertake, where the proceeding was fairly entered upon. We see nothing touching this point requiring judicial interference.

As to compensation for the injury which the grading of the street may work to the property of the plaintiffs, they are entitled to none on general principles of law. This is [241]*241well settled. If the trastees were proceeding in violation of law and negligently and wantonly prosecuting the work to their detriment, the case would be different; but where a street is graded pursuant to legal authority and in a careful manner, the adjoining owners of lots have no right to compensation for consequential damages to their lots, unless expressly given by statute, ,and, in that case, the compensation must be sought in the manner prescribed by the statute. So are almost all the authorities. We know of but one Court that has decided to the contrary, and that is the Supreme Court of Ohio, in Akron v. McCombs, 15 and 18 Ohio Reports, a decision which Bronson, C. J., in delivering the unanimous opinion of the Court of Appeals in New - York, in Radcliff’s Executors v. The Mayor, &c., of Brooklyn, says “is entitled to no respect whatever,” “ and can not be law beyond the state of Ohio.” 4 Comstock 195. This opinion, we may say, exhausts the subject and establishes the law, as above asserted, beyond cavil.

The construction of the wharf presents a different question. The law constituting the charter of the town of Rockport does not empower the corporation to construct a wharf. It can not therefore do it as a distinct, independent undertaking.

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6 Ind. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-president-of-rockport-ind-1855.