Tilton v. New Orleans City Railroad

35 La. Ann. 1062
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1883
DocketNo. 8613
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 35 La. Ann. 1062 (Tilton v. New Orleans City Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tilton v. New Orleans City Railroad, 35 La. Ann. 1062 (La. 1883).

Opinions

■ The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Bermudez, C. J.

This is an injunction suit coupled with a prayer for damages, to prevent the defendant Company from running and stationing their steam cars and trains in front of the residences and stores of plaintiffs, on Canal street in this City, between Rampart street •and Bourbon and Carondelet streets, the last two meeting and intersecting the first named street.-

The grounds upon which the injunction is claimed are : that the strip of ground, on which the cars run and station, in the centre of the space ■between the buildings, fronting on- each 'external line of the double ■'street, and commonly known as the “ neutral ground,” was dedicated •by the City to public use as a street and promenade; that the plaintiffs, having acquired their property from the City with reference to such dedication, have a vested right therein and cannot be divested ■thereof by the City; that the defendants are thus operating their train's without legal authority; that the use to which said strip of land was 'and is thus devoted, is an intolerable nuisance, greatly prejudicial to the plaintiffs in their persons, and detrimental to the value of their ■'property '; that they, the plaintiffs, are entitled to have such nuisance abated and to claim damages for the injury sustained. The petition ■concludes with a prayer that an injunction issue and be perpetuated, and that the plaintiffs recover forty-five thousand dollars damages, to accrue to them in different proportions.

" After a hearing on the face of the papers, an injunction was allowed, ■'which was subsequently dissolved on bond.

■ The answers contain a denegation of the pretensions and charge's preferred, particularly of a want of authority to the right of way and ■of running the steam cars, on the strip of land in' question, and of the 'truth of the complaint that the exercise of such privilege has resulted ‘into an intolerable nuisance. The defendants further plead, that the ■plaintiffs are not entitled to an injunction, and that their money claim 'is barred by prescription.

' From a judgment dissolving the injunction and rejecting their demand, the plaintiffs have appealed.

[1066]*1066The fact that the defendants run and station steam ears and trains, as charged in the petition, is not disputed. The right of the plaintiffs to complain, if the running and stationing are unauthorized, and if the same are an intolerable nuisance, cannot be questioned.

The parties litigant have raised, argued and submitted many issues, only two of which we think should be determined, to set their differences at rest. They are :

1. Have the defendants legal authority to run and station their cars as they do ?

2. If they have such authority, is the exercise by the use of steam of the right thus acquired a nuisance which should be abated?

I.

The record shows that, on the 22d of August, 1876, by Ordinance 3617 A. S., the City Council gaye a permission, revocable at pleasure, to the Company to run their cars between Basin and Carondelet streets ; that, on the 15th of June, 1830, this permission was recalled by Ordinance 6528. It was renewed on the 3d of March, 1881, by Ordinance 6891, at the request of a large number of citizens styling themselves property holders and residents on Canal street, and authority giv.en the Company to extend its track from Basin to Carondelet streets.

The municipal authority to thus use the neutral ground is so clearly given, that, but for the denial of the power of the council to make the concession, the first question would be of easy solution.

The plaintiffs contend, first, that the City had no right to grant the privilege of way; because:

A. The strip of land on which the cars are run and station, was dedicated to special public use; because

B. The City has no right to change the destination of a public place thus consecrated.

It appears that the United States having acquired, by the treaty of cession of Louisiana, the property known and designated as the “ commons,” donated the same in 1807 to the City of New Orleans, with the conditions: that a reserve would be made of a strip through a portion of the same, sufficient for a canal, to enable the New Orleans Navigation Co. to connect its canal and basin with the river, and that the same would forever remain open as a public highway. The space in question measuring 42 feet, French measure, was that selected for the purpose.

In 1809, the City authorities caused the commons to be divided into blocks and lots. Many were sold for ground rents. The titles describe them as fronting on a projected road up to the line reserved, upper or lower, for the Navigation Company.

[1067]*1067In 1809, twenty-seven lots remaining unsold on Canal street, a plan was made of the same by the then City Surveyor, Pilie, which, by resolution of the Couucil, was to serve as a guide for the ordered sale. That plan shows that the space between the blocks on the upper and lower sides of Canal street, was thereon designated as Rue et Promenade du Canal.” The lots of two of the plaintiffs figure on that plan.

In 1838, an attempt being made to excavate a canal on that middle space, it was arrested by the populace, who thought that the excavation would affect the public health, and the excavated spots were filled.

In 1842, the rights of the Navigation Company to the neutral ground were seized, offered for sale and adjudicated to the City of New Orleans.

In 1847, in the case of French vs. N. O., C. R. R. Co., 2 An. 87, passing allusion was made to old Canal street by this Court, and it was there said : “ That street was laid out as a single street, and the proprietors, on both sides, purchased their lots with reference to that destination. The authority given to the Company to extend their canal through the middle of it was a change of destination' of public property, not a divestiture of private ownership.”

There can be no doubt that, from the beginning, the whole of the space was dedicated to public use. A strip, in front of the blocks, on each side, at first, 11 feet, presently, 18 feet wide, was devoted as sidewalks j then, two other contiguous strips of a certain width were laid out and used as streets, leaving between them the strip, forty feet wide, known as the “ neutral ground,” upon which the steam trains of the defendant Company and the horse cars of several other companies are run and station.

That dedication was, therefore, originally for the purpose of a contemplated canal and side streets, and subsequently, for “a street and promenade.”

The question which next presents itself is, whether that dedication has been changed, by the City, and if so, whether the City had the right to do so, and whether the plaintiffs can be heard to complain.

The evidence does not show that the neutral ground in question has absolutely ceased to be a “promenade.”

The word is used without any limit, and means, as well, promenade ápied, á cheval, as en voiture, or any other, subject -to municipal regulations. ’

The well known “ Promenade des Champs Elysées,” in the great French metropolis, is used for all three purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
35 La. Ann. 1062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tilton-v-new-orleans-city-railroad-la-1883.