Stevenson v. Mayor of Chattanooga

20 F. 586, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2259
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedApril 17, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 20 F. 586 (Stevenson v. Mayor of Chattanooga) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevenson v. Mayor of Chattanooga, 20 F. 586, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2259 (uscirct 1884).

Opinion

Key, J.

Complainant alleges that he is the owner of a parcel of land lying on the Tennessee river, in the northern part of the city of Chattanooga. Three of the streets of the city — Market, Broad, and Chestnut — run, as he insists, to this land, but have not been extended through it to the river. He says that for many years he has used this real estate as a wharf, and has expended large sums of money in preparing and improving it, and keeping it in repair, for the purposes to which it has been appropriated. The public, for many years, have used it as a wharf, and he says he has charged and received wharfage for all such goods and merchandise as have been discharged, from vessels navigating the river, upon the wharf.

It appears that on May 18, 1883, the corporate authorities of Chattanooga passed the following ordinance:

An ordinance to provide for defining the streets of the city at the Tennessee river, and to make it a misdemeanor for any person to collect wharfage within the limits of any street.
Section 1. Be it ordained, by the mayor and aldermen of the city of Chat-tannoga, that the city engineer shall cause stakes or monuments to be set so as to indicate the boundaries of streets at the Tennessee river.
See. 2. Be it further ordained, that it shall be a misdemeanor for any person or company or incorporation to collect wharfage, or in any way interfere with or obstruct the discharge of cargoes of freight, within the boundaries of streets as so indicated, or with the removal of same after it is discharged, on any pretense or claim of a right to wharfage on such freight.
Sec. 3. Be it further ordained, that it shall be a misdemeanor for any person to charge or collect any wharfage or towage for the landing of any boat or craft ■yvithin the limits of any street, as defined by the stakes or monuments above provided for, or in any way to interfere with the landing of [587]*587boats or the discharge of their cargoes within such streets, on any claim or pretext of a right to collect wharfage or towage.
Sec. 4. lie it further ordained, that any person convicted of, any of the offenses herein described shall be subject to a fine of not less than ten dollars nor more than iifty dollars, at the discretion of the recorder, for each and every offense.
See. 5. Be it further ordained, that this ordinance shall take effect and be in force from the date of its passage.

It is quite evident that the complainant never convoyed that part of this property claimed for the streets to the city, or that the city, by any authoritive act, had appropriated the land to that purpose, or paid complainant its value. But, I think, it is equally clear that the public has used these streets and regarded them as such. Buildings have been erected upon the blocks adjoining them, but not upon the streets. They have been used and are necessary as approaches to the wharf, and to close them would virtually cut the public off from the wharf, and Market street leads to, and for many years has been used as, an approach to a public ferry. Besides all this, complainant, in some of his deeds of lease and conveyance, has described the property as embracing these streets. I conclude, therefore, that the land occupied by these streets was dedicated by complainant to that use, or the public has become entitled so to use them by prescription. But this use is a mere easement. The legal title remains in complainant ; or, if not, the title would revert to him were the streets discontinued, and the public cease to use them as public highways. The city or the public are not entitled to their use for any other purpose. The law of the state imposes upon the defendant the duty of keeping these streets in repair, and free from obstruction, so that the people may pass over them conveniently. But the manifest purpose of the ordinance is, not to open and improve these streets for travel, but it is to convert the termini of the streets at the river into wharves, at which boats and other water-craft may land and discharge their cargoes without the payment of wharfage or other charge. The effect of the ordinance is, after the complainant, by the authority of the city, had established and improved his wharves, and opened streets to them through Ids lands, to take away the value and use of his wharves, by converting the streets which he had dedicated to the public for one use, to another and different purpose. Substantially, it is depriving him of the use of his property without compensation. I think it plain and palpable that this cannot be done. If the defendant allow freights to be discharged on these streets, and boats to be landed at them, it cannot prevent complainant from entering thereon and collecting such wharfage as the law and ordinances of the city authorize. He lias the right to enter upon those streets to collect the fees or charges, if defendant direct or permit the vessels and goods to land there. He has parted with no right to the land thus used as streets, except that he has given it to the public to use as a highway. He has not given to the city or the public the right to use it as a free [588]*588wharf. It would be inequitable and violative of his constitutional rights, both state and federal, thus to deprive him of the value and use of his property; and the provisions of the ordinance referred to, so far as they undertake to do this, are void.

(May 9, 1884.) Motion for an Attachment for Disobedience to an Injunction,

The defendant' will be perpetually enjoined from enforcing, as against the complainant, the provisions of the second, third, and fourth sections of the ordinance of May 18, 1883, or from otherwise preventing him from collecting such wharfage as he may be entitled to.

The court being of the opinion that defendant is liable for the amount of such actual wharfage and towage as complainant has been prevented from collecting by reason of the provisions of the ordinance mentioned, the clerk of this court, as special commissioner, will hear proof, and report, at as early a day as convenient, what the amount of such wharfage afid towage is; bond and security having been required of the defendant for the payment thereof at the commencement of this litigation, upon condition that defendant failed therein.

Key é Richmond, for complainant.

H. M. Wiltse,. for respondent.

Kev, J. The bill was filed in this cause, alleging that respondent, without authority, had run Market, Broad, and Chestnut streets through his wharf property to the Tennessee river; had ordained that steam-boats and other water-craft might land at the ends of these streets and discharge their cargoes upon the streets, and has prevented complainant’s agents from entering thereon to collect wharf-age. A decree was but a few days ago pronounced in the cause, declaring that the streets named had, by dedication, been extended to the river, and the public had an easement therein, — that is, to use them as streets, — but that respondent could not prevent complainant and his agents from entering upon these streets and collecting wharf-age upon such-merchandise as might be discharged thereon; and respondent was enjoined from doing so. Defendant now seems to have changed front, and has declared that boats shall not land and load and unload their cargoes at and upon these streets, and has arrested the master of a boat who has done so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F. 586, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevenson-v-mayor-of-chattanooga-uscirct-1884.