State ex rel. McNerney v. Armstrong

149 N.W. 786, 97 Neb. 343, 1914 Neb. LEXIS 351
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1914
DocketNo. 17,864
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 149 N.W. 786 (State ex rel. McNerney v. Armstrong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. McNerney v. Armstrong, 149 N.W. 786, 97 Neb. 343, 1914 Neb. LEXIS 351 (Neb. 1914).

Opinions

Sedgwick, J.

In August, 1910, the First National Bank of Lincoln asked the mayor an'd city council for “a permit for tiie erection of the new First National Bank building, to be located at the southeast corner of Tenth and 0 streets, Lincoln, Nebraska.” It was stated in the application that “the drawings call for an areaway, same being forty-five feet long by five feet wide in the clear. This areawav would be located twenty-five feet from alley line on the Tenth street side of the building.” The permit was granted as requested and the building was erected. It was understood that this areaway was for the purpose of constructing a stairway to the basement of the building. After-wards the relator began this action in the district court for Lancaster county against these defendants, wlio are the mayor and council of the city of Lincoln, to compel them to cause the “open areaway in the public sidewalk in Tenth street, adjacent to the west line of lot 12, in block [345]*34555 of the original plat of the city of Lincoln, to be closed, the iron fence and the concrete footing upon which the same stands on the public sidewalk inclosing the side and end of said open areaway to be removed, and each and every part of the public sidewalk space adjoining the said west line of aforesaid lot 12 to be made safe and unobstructed for public travel thereon.” The district court found the issues in favor of the respondents and dismissed the proceedings. The relator has appealed.

Section 4475, Rev. St. 1913, provides: “The mayor and council shall have supervision and control of all public ways and public grounds within the city, and shall require the same to be kept open, in repair and free from nuisances.”

Section 4418 gives the city authorities power “to remove all obstructions from the sidewalk, curbstones, gutters and cross-walks at the expense of the owners or occupants of the grounds fronting thereon, or at the expense of the person placing the same there; and to regulate the buildings of bulkheads, cellars and basement-ways, stairways, railways, windows and doorways, awnings, hitching posts and rails, lamp posts, awning posts, and all other structures upon or over adjoining excavations through or under the sidewalks of the city.”

The sidewalk ordinance of the city of Lincoln provides: “Section 1. Hereafter there shall be reserved on each side of every street in the city of Lincoln, for sidewalks and for the cultivation of trees and grass, a space equal to one-fourth of the street from abutting lot lines: Provided, that on streets in paving districts, said space shall extend from the lot line to the curb line.

“Section 2. All sidewalks * * * in front and alongside of any,building in any part of the city where area-ways or cellars are in use under any sidewalk, and also in front of any lot used for any business purpose shall extend from- the line of the abutting lot to the curb line.

“Section 3. Sidewalks on business streets or portions thereof shall be constructed so as to incline upwards from the outer edge of the sidewalk toward the building or [346]*346boundary of the lot at the rate of not less than one inch nor more than one and one-fourth inches in three feet; the outer edge of said walk to rest on the top of the curb; and no part of said walk shall be taken for private use by lowering or cutting down the same next to the building; and said walk shall be built up to the. building on a- uniform grade.”

“Section 7. No person shall be allowed to keep or use for vaults, areas, or other purposes, the space beneath the sidewalk included within the sidewalk lines of any street in this city, unless a permit therefor shall have been obtained from the city council; such permits, heretofore granted or hereafter to be granted, shall continue, or to be issued, only upon condition that the party receiving the same shall, as a consideration for such use and such privilege granted, build, maintain, and keep in repair a sidewalk over such space intended to be used for vaults, areas, or other purposes, and pay all damages that may be sustained by any person by reason of said sidewalk being in a defective or dangerous condition.”

“Section 9. Areas about windows opening through the sidewalk immediately adjacent to the buildings to admit light and air to a basement, shall be protected and covered by strong iron grating, the bars of which shall not be more than one inch apart, and so constructed that the same may be walked upon with safety, and of sufficient strength to hold any weight that would come upon the walk at this point. In order to prevent accidents, all hatchways, coal holes, or openings of,any sort through sidewalks shall be provided with strong iron or iron and glass coverings, with rough surface, and the entire construction of said areas, hatchways, entrances and opening shall be subject to the direction and supervision of the city engineer.”

“Section 11. It shall be unlawful for any person, firm or corporation to leave open any opening in any sidewalk, or suffer the same to be left or kept open, or suffer any sidewalk in front of his or its premises to become or continue so broken or otherwise defective as to endanger life ■or limb.”

[347]*347The relator contends that these statutes arid these ordinances require that there shall he no openings in the sidewalk, and'that the city council has no power to allow such ■openings for stairways to the basements of buildings under any circumstances. The statute evidently leaves the matter with the city council. They are given express power to “remove all obstructions from the sidewalk, * * * and to regulate the building of bulkheads, cellars and basement-ways, stairways, * * * and all other structures upon or over adjoining excavations through or under” sidewalks. The power to “regulate” basement-ways, arid stairways and excavations through sidewalks, of course, does not imply that such things are forbidden by statute; conferring such powers rather implies that, under some circumstances, such basement-ways, stairways, and cellars and excavations through sidewalks will be appropriate and necessary and ought to be regulated by ordinance.

In City of Plattsmouth v. Nebraska Telephone Co., 80 Neb. 460, it was contended that a city or incorporated town had no power to grant a telephone company the use of its ■streets, alleys and public grounds, but the court held that such power existed, and in the opinion it was said: “That ■the city may order the removal of poles which endanger the citizens because of a rotten condition, and protect its inhabitants against any conduct of the business which'endangers the public health or safety, is not a question open to dispute; but nothing of the kind appears in the record before us. As before stated, Main street is 100 feet in width. There is no evidence of a congested condition of the street or of any necessity from other causes for removing the defendant’s poles.”

The statute of Iowa requires the city authorities to keep the streets open and free from nuisances, and does not expressly authorize areaways and stairways through sidewalks, but the supreme court of that state decided: “Areas for light, arid basement windows, and descents are necessary, in order to carry on business in a city, and, if such excavations are properly guarded, * * ;* they do not, in themselves, constitute a nuisance.” Keyes, v. City of Cedar [348]*348Falls, 107 Ia. 509.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 N.W. 786, 97 Neb. 343, 1914 Neb. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-mcnerney-v-armstrong-neb-1914.