Spiegel v. Gansberg

44 Ind. 418
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 44 Ind. 418 (Spiegel v. Gansberg) 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
Spiegel v. Gansberg, 44 Ind. 418 (Ind. 1873).

Opinion

Buskiric, J.

This was an action brought by the appellees against the appellants and the city of Indianapolis, to enjoin the appellants from proceeding under an order of the common council of said city vacatingan alley therein, upon the ground that said order had been illegally passed.

The complaint alleges that the appellants presented to the common council of said city a petition for the vacation of an alley of said city, describing it. The petition is set forth in the complaint, and it is averred that it was referred to the committee on streets and alleys; that said plaintiff) with divers others, owning real estate in and near out-lot '85, presented a remonstrance to said common council, against the vacation of said alley, which was referred to the same committee; that the said common council subsequently ordered the vacation of the first alley south of Pogue’s Run; that said out-lot 85 was, in the year 1850, laid out into twenty lots by one John Little, and a plat thereof duly recorded, which plat shows an alley twenty-four feet in width, now known as Cook street, running north and south nearly through the center of said out-lot, and four alleys running east and west; said alleys being so located that each separate lot in said out-lot was bounded by a street or alley on either the north or south side thereof; that front[419]*419ing on said north and south alley, on Cook street, are-several dwelling-houses, all occupied, two of them belonging to William Cook, one of the plaintiffs and one of the remonstrants against said vacation, and two belonging to the heirs of Frederick Cook, one of said heirs being William Cook, a remonstrant; one owned by John Moran, a remonstrant; and also, two school-houses, one on each side of said alley or Cook street, belonging to the Evangelical Lutheran Church; that nearly all of the south half of out-lot 85 and all of out-lot 86 are densely built up and occupied by about seventy families,

That out-lot 87, directly south, and out-lot 88, immediately south-east and cornering with out-lot 85, and the south half of square 80, directly west, and square 81, south-west and cornering with said out-lot 85, are all occupied as residences and business houses and contain a large population, all of whom are interested in keeping open the public avenues through said several squares and out-lots, except the said petitioners, who own the lots immediately bordering on said alley in controversy, and whose private interests will be promoted by the vacation of said alley.

That the said remonstrants, except Anthony Shrader, were at the time, and still are, owners of lots in out-lot 85, or the out-lots and squares immediately surrounding the same (particularly describing the lots owned by each); that the west half of the first alley appearing on the plat of out-lot 85 south of Pogue’s Run was vacated about six years ago, and is now partly occupied by the Junction Railroad Company, and is unavailable for transit through said square; and by the vacation of the alley namedin the petition, William Haskett will be cut off from any outlet or approach to the rear of his lot from East or Cook streets; that Maryland street, lying immediately north of lots 85 and 86, is encumbered, and the entrance thereto from Liberty street is encumbered, by the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, and St. Louis, and the Junction Railroad Companies’ tracks, and divers railroad switches, and so much and frequently obstructed by the passage of cars and [420]*420by trains of cars standing on Maryland street at the crossing of Liberty street, as to make Liberty street at said crossing almost useless, and always dangerous for the passage of persons and vehicles; that the nearest and most convenient outlet to East street, for persons living on the north half of out-lots 85 and 86, will be through the alley so sought to be vacated.

And to clearly show the location of said several out-iots, streets, and alleys, a map of out-lots 85, 86, 87, and 88 was appended to the complaint.

The complaint further states that such proceedings were, had by said common council on said petition and remonstrance, that on the 18th day of June, 1870, said common council, on the recommendation of said committee on streets and alleys, did unlawfully and illegally, as plaintiffs are advised, make and pass an order that said alley should be vacated, which order was as follows:

" Come now the petitioners and produce proof that they have given the legal notice of the pendency, before the common council of the city of Indianapolis, of their petition to vacate the first alley south of Pogue’s Run, running east and west through out-lot 85 from East to Liberty street; and no person appeared to object to said vacation who had a legal right to do so, as appears from an opinion of the city attorney herewith reported; and it appeared to the satisfaction of the common council that the prayer of the petitioners should be granted. It is therefore ordered by the common council of the city of Indianapolis, that the said alley running east and west through out-lot 85, from East to Liberty street, be and the same is hereby vacated.”

And the said complainants further state and charge, that said council disregarded the remonstrance aforesaid, under the pretence that said remonstrants had no legal right to remonstrate against the vacation of said alley, when in fact all of said remonstrants were real estate owners of said city and residents therein, and were ail real estate owners in said out-lot 85 or in other out-lots and squares immediately adjacent thereto, except said Shrader, and interested in [421]*421keeping open all streets and alleys in said out-lot 85, in order that they may have free ingress'ánd egress to and from tlie streets and alleys in and around said out-lot; and they were ■advised and so charge that the action of said common council was illegal, because, while said remonstrance was before it and not withdrawn, said council had no power, under the statute, to order the vacation of said alley, without a petition in favor thereof by two-thirds of the real estate owners of said city petitioning for said vacation, except those named in said original petition, being all the real estate holders of said city, and then numbering more than a thousand, and none of said remonstrants having withdrawn their objection to such vacation.

The complaint further charges that the action of the said council was unauthorized and illegal, because the petition on which it acted did not give the names of the persons to be affected by the vacation of said alley.

And the said complaint further states, that the lots lying immediately on said alley are owned by the said Spiegel, Thoms, and their co-petitioners, exclusively, and they threaten to and are about to take possession of said alley and appropriate it to their private use, claiming that, by said order of vacation, the title of the ground covered by said alley has vested in them; wherefore, etc. Then follows a special prayer to enjoin the said common council from taking any steps to carry into execution the said order vacating said alley, and the appellants from taking the possession of, and appropriating to their private use, the ground covered by the said alley, or from in any manner obstructing the said alley so as to interfere with the free use thereof by the public.

A temporary restraining order was-granted by consent on the part of the common council of said city.

The appellants demurred to the complaint, upon the ground that it did not contain facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Ind. 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spiegel-v-gansberg-ind-1873.