Thorndike v. Milwaukee Auditorium Co.

126 N.W. 881, 143 Wis. 1, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 281
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 126 N.W. 881 (Thorndike v. Milwaukee Auditorium Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thorndike v. Milwaukee Auditorium Co., 126 N.W. 881, 143 Wis. 1, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 281 (Wis. 1910).

Opinion

Timxin, J.

The complaint in this action averred that the plaintiffs are the sole heirs at law of Byron Kilboum, who died testate on December 16, 1870, leaving surviving him his widow, Henrietta, and his son, Byron H. Kilboum. His will, which was duly admitted to probate, after devising [5]*5and bequeathing a life estate in certain real property and some personal property to bis widow, devised and bequeathed all the rest, residue, and remainder of his estate one half to Byron H. Kilbourn and the other half to I. A. Lapham in trust for the plaintiffs. In the year 1891 Byron H. Kil-bourn died intestate leaving surviving him the plaintiffs, his -only heirs at law. Henrietta died, and the trust to I. A. Lapham has long since been executed and the property which was the subject of that trust conveyed to the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs also averred that they own two described lots within the limits of the plat hereinafter mentioned and situate a short distance from the public square in question, but it does not appear that these lots abut on that square or on the streets in front of that square. One of the plaintiffs is a resident of Milwaukee. There is no averment that the suit is brought in behalf of the taxpayers of the city, no averment that either of the plaintiffs is a taxpayer, and that fact could only be deduced from the averment that plaintiffs own real estate in the city of Milwaukee. This averment is, however, inserted in the complaint for a wholly different purpose, namely, to show the interest of the plaintiffs in preserving the original ■dedication by reason of their ownership of lots in the plat as well as by force of their succession to the rights of Byron Balbourn through their father and through execution of the Lapham trust. It is averred that on October 8, 1835, Byron Kilbourn, being the sole owner in fee simple of fractional .governmerit lots 3 and 4 in the N. E. ■]- of section 29, township 7 N., of range 22 E., in Milwaukee county, made and recorded a plat of these and other lands belonging to him in .accordance with the act of the territorial legislature of Michigan approved April 12, 1827. In and by said plat he dedi•cated to the public a described square, space, or tract of land 420 feet in length by 150 feet in width, with the express proviso and condition duly written into and part of said plat .certificate and dedication that said space or square or tract [6]*6was to be left vacant as public ground and no building was ever to be erected thereon by any body corporate or politic, except that in case of the town becoming incorporated the town authorities might erect a market house on such space. This dedication was duly accepted by “the public authorities.”

The Milwaukee Auditorium Company has taken steps under ch. 426, Laws of 1905, to join with the city of Milwaukee in the erection and maintenance of an auditorium or music hall, each to pay half the money necessary for that purpose. The city raises its share by sale of its bonds which it has issued for this purpose to the amount of $250,000, and the Auditorium, Company its share from the proceeds of subscriptions to its shares of capital stock. Plans and specifications have been prepared for a building 400 feet in length by 300 feet in width and 150 feet in height, with one or more auditoriums, offices, classrooms, studios, music halls,, music rooms, gymnasiums, lodge rooms, and accommodations for industrial, commercial, scientific, educational, fraternal, and musical organizations, and labor associations desiring to use the same for kindred purposes, and defendants-intend to operate and manage the building in the manner specified in ch. 426, supra. The defendants give out and threaten to, and are about to, proceed with the erection of this building on the public square or space above mentioned and upon a strip of land adjoining this on the west owned by the city. The building so proposed to be erected will completely cover the dedicated square or space, its erection and maintenance amount to an appropriation of the public square to private gain and the diversion thereof to a purpose foreign-to that for which the land was dedicated by the plaintiffs’" said ancestor. Prayer that the defendants be enjoined from erecting this building on the public square and for general relief.

The defendants answered jointly, denying that the use-[7]*7proposed was foreign to the purposes for which the land was dedicated, and averring, further, that from 1867 to 1881 this space in question was let or leased as a site for market buildings. The latter buildings were demolished in 1881, and the whole square covered by a building used for the purposes of an industrial exposition owned by a private corporation which held from the city of Milwaukee a lease of the ground, and this use continued until June, 1905, when the exposition building was destroyed by fire and -not rebuilt. This lease to the exposition company was authorized by ch. 461, Laws of 1885. A claim of adverse possession is set up and a denial that the plaintiffs are wronged or injured or damaged by the acts in question.

The cause was tried and the court made findings supporting the averments of the complaint, except as to the right of the plaintiffs to maintain the action, and further to the effect that the square or space in question remained wholly vacant and unoccupied from its dedication down to 1867 or 1868, during which time it was commonly known as “the Second Ward Park.” Erom that time for about three years it was leased by the city to be built upon and used as a skating rink and was so built upon and used for three years, but the lease from the city covering the period last mentioned provided that the skating rink should be placed far enough back from the street to admit of the erection of stalls and booths for market gardeners. However, no such stalls or booths were erected or used during these three years. Thereafter and up to 1876 the space was used for a public market under a ground lease from the city to the owner of the building thereon and leases of booths and stalls from the lessee to the market men or dealers. In 1876 the city leased the space in question to a corporation called the West Side Market Association for the term of five years and five months at a nominal rental, and this corporation used the premises for market purposes as well as for theatrical and other amuse[8]*8ments until 1880. At this date a corporation called the Milwaukee Industrial Exposition was organized for the purpose of constructing an industrial exposition building and operating the same. To this coi*poration the city of Milwaukee on October 12, 1880, leased the space in question with the adjoining land owned by the city for the term of fifty years at an annual rental of $1, said premises to be used only for the purposes of an industrial exposition in the city of Milwaukee as contemplated in the articles of association of the lessee, and for such other purposes of a public nature as the directors of said exposition company should approve. This lease further provided that the lessee should erect a building on said premises to cost not less than $150,000, and, in case of the destruction of this building by fire, if the same was not rebuilt within two years the lease should cease and determine.

Ch. 461, Laws of 1885, expressly authorized the city of Milwaulcee to lease this square or space for the purpose of maintaining a building thereon to he used for annual industrial expositions and for a public museum, and ratified and confirmed the lease already made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 N.W. 881, 143 Wis. 1, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thorndike-v-milwaukee-auditorium-co-wis-1910.