Skrainka v. Oertel

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court

This is an application for an injunction. The plaintiffs allege that they oavii a lot in city block 237, bounded west by Commercial Street; that Commercial Street runs east and west through the block, and is not a public way, but a private easement essential to the convenient use of plaintiff’s property; that defendants, from April, 1882, to the filing of the bill on the 9th of May, 1882, have quarried into Commercial Street south of and adjoining plaintiffs’ property; that this is an irreparable *476injury to plaintiffs, and endangers and destroys their easement, etc.

The defendants file separate answers. They deny that a private way ever existed over Commercial Street, in block 237, or that their acts interfered with plaintiffs’ rights. They aver that Commercial Street in said block has been abandoned as a way of street for twenty years, during which period plaintiffs and the property holders in the block quarried in Commercial Street until it is an almost exhausted quarry. They say that, by reason of these acts of plaintiffs and others, and the representation of plaintiffs, defendant Hernán was induced to believe that all rights of way over Commercial Street were abandoned, and, so believing, he bought land in block 237, and expended large sums in preparing to quarry on his said land and on Commercial Street. Oertel alleges that, in 1877, he owned a strip of ground lying between the lot of plaintiff and Laboaume Street, and became a partner of plaintiff as quarrymen; and that plaintiffs and he then agreed that Commercial Street had been abandoned more than ten years, and they quarried out all the rock on Commercial Street from Labeaume Street south to Heman’s lot, so that plaintiffs, when they subsequently bought their lot described in the petition, knew that there was no way over Commercial Street. Hernán further states that he had a license from all owners in the block, except plaintiff, to quarry out Commercial Street, the value of which, owing to his investments in quarry property made with knowledge of plaintiffs, is $10,000. He also alleges that the former owners of the block, by their recorded partition, deed, and plot, laid out Commercial Street through the block, and that the property so marked as a street has never been assessed for taxes. A temporary injunction was granted, which was dissolved on motion when the cause was heard on its merits. The witnesses agree as to the material facts, which are as follows: —

Block 237 was owned in 1857 by Bogy, Page, and Benoist, *477who then made partition by deed and plat duly recorded. The plat in the partition is set out below, in order to the better understanding of this statement.

Labeaume Street is not used as a street, but is occupied as private property. Bogy and Main Streets are macadamized streets. Front street is occupied by tracks of the K. C., N. & W. railroad'and of the St. Louis Transfer Company, from the eastern line of the block to the river. The property north of lot 7, including that marked as La-’ beaume Street, is in possession of plaintiff. Lot 8 is owned and used by plaintiffs, and they have a lease of the *478land marked Labeaume Street. Over lot 8 and the property marked Labeaume Street they have, by virtue of their present possession under lease, a way to Main Street. For the purpose of showing that the property marked Front Street is private ground plaintiff introduced a deed from Barnes and wife to Mitchell and Tansey, who are trustees of the Transfer Company, for lots 1, 2 and 3, of block 237, and the land on Front Street lying between those three lots and the river. Plaintiffs acquired lot 7 by deed dated 29th of March, 1880. It is described as bounded west by Commercial Street, and east by proposed Front Street. All the mesne conveyances from Bogy, to whom the land was assigned in partition, to plaintiffs’ grantor, bound lot 7 west by Commercial Street. Heman acquired lots 5 and 6 in March, 1881, a year after the date of plaintiffs’ deed. On the next day he reconveyed them to Mitchell and Tansey to hold after September 1, 1884, Heman to fill up to the grade such parts as he might quarry out, and Mitchell and Tansey to have the sole right to lay railroad tracks on the lots. It was admitted that defendants had begun to quarry, and, unless restrained, would quarry Commercial Street for a depth of fifty feet. The testimony shows that Commercial Street has been quarried by different persons from time to time since 1857, and during that time was not fit for travel, and has never been used as a thoroughfare, though it might be crossed at different points, the old quarries being from time to time filled up. There is now a gully twelve feet deep across the street in this block. Oertel testified that he bought ground in block 237, and quarried on lots 8, 9 and 10. In 1877 he formed a partnership with plaintiffs, to whom he sold a two-thirds interest in this quarry, which extended across Commercial Street. Heman had gone over his line only a foot or two on Commercial Street, but plaintiffs have quarried to a depth of sixty-three feet below He man’s lot. Heman testified that plaintiffs were quarrying right on Commercial Street in the *479July and August of 1881; and that plaintiff Yeiths told defendants that it was a public highway; that they had no right to quarry it, but that he alone had such right; that he had it pretty near out himself; and told every one else that it was a public highway on which they had no right to quarry.

1. The trial court dissolved the injunction, and we think that, upon the evidence, this was right. Plaintiff Yeiths himself testified that it was impossible to go south on Commercial Street beyond the quarry which plaintiffs themselves had made there. Whether the street was a public street or a private way, plaintiffs made out no case for equitable relief. As to their easement of a right of way, the evidence is, that, for nearly three times the period of statutory limitation, the so-called Commercial Street has been notoriously used merely for stone quarries and dumping ground. Plaintiffs not only have had ziotice of this, but have contributed themselves to a use of the property that makes any right of way useless to anybody. Having themselves effectually obstructed the passage, plaintiffs have destroyed any right of way in themselves, if they ever had any. Taylor v. Hampton, 4 McCord, 96.

But if this is to be looked upon as a proceeding by one specially injured, to abate a public nuisance, then it ozzght to fail. The petition does not allege that Comtnez'cial Street, through block 327, is or ever was a public street. It does allege that it is not a public street. There can be no puzpresture if this strip called Commercial Street is not a part of the public domain ; and, were the allegations sufficiezztly made in the petition, the alleged purpresture must clearly appear in fact; and if it be doubtful whether there be a purpresture the relief should be withheld. Attorney-General v. Railroad Co., 12 N. J. Eq. 1; City v. Curtiss, Clark (N. Y. Eq.) 339. In all cases of doubtful z’ight, or remote or contingent injury, a court of chancery will wait for the right to be settled at law, or the injury to become imminent, *480before it will interfere by the extraordinary process of injunction; and though, in case of direct, continuing, and permanent nuisance, equity will not compel plaintiff to resort to repeated actions at law, but will enjoin the nuisance (Hayden v. Tucker, 37 Mo. 214), yet the case must be one in which the existence of a nuisance is not doubtful.

Now, there seems to be no evidence that defendants are encroaching upon any public street. It is not enough that it appears that Commercial Street was dedicated as a street through block 327 by the owner. Labeaume Street, so far as the plat shows, is dedicated by the Benoist partition as well as Commercial Street; yet one of the grounds on which plaintiffs seek relief is that Labeaume Street is not a public street, but private property. An owner of land in the city limits does not make it a public street by mere dedication to public use. The city, we apprehend, must accept, or there must be a user by the public for the purpose of the dedication. A formal acceptance may not be necessary; but in the present case there is absolutely nothing to show any acceptance or use of Commercial Street through block 327 as a street, nor even that it corresponds with and continues the line of any city street, whilst there is evidence tending to show that from the time of the alleged dedication in the Benoist partition this pretended street has never been used as a street, but rather as a stone quarry. Rector v. Hartt, 8 Mo. 457; Rose v. City, 49 Mo. 510; Taylor v. City, 14 Mo. 20.

If Commercial Street were a public street, and their case was otherwise made out, plaintiffs might be entitled to an injunction on the ground that the injury threatened and complained of affects them in a special manner as property holders ip the block. But they have themselves contributed to and set the example of the nuisance they are now seeking to abate. They themselves have obstructed, and are now obstructing, the natural outlet to Bogy Street. Nor does it appear that there is any immediate danger of irreparable *481injury. Plaintiffs have access on their own land, and on land leased by them; that is, over lot 8 and Labeaume Street, to Main Street, and over lots 10 and 11; they can also reach Main Street if they can cross Commercial Street, and if they can not cross Commercial Street, between lots 7 and 10, it is on account of the hole that they themselves have dug there.

We do not think that the circuit court, upon the evidence, was bound to maintain in force the restraining order in favor of plaintiffs, who themselves destroyed the pretended street as a way for all owners of property fronting on it, including themselves, and who have acquiesced for many years, and so long as such acquiescence furthered their private interests, in a use of the land now said by them to be a public street or a private way, for purposes utterly inconsistent with its use as a street or way.

We do not think that the statutory provision first introduced in 1865 (Rev. Stats., sect. 2722), that “the remedy by writ of injunction or prohibition shall exist in all cases where an injury to real or personal property is threatened, and to prevent the doing of any legal wrong whatever, whenever, in the opinion of the court, an adequate remedy can not be afforded by an action for damages,” makes it obligatory upon the circuit court to issue the writ under circumstances where a chancellor might have properly refused it before the statutory provision. Its effect, perhaps, has been to lead the court to look with more favor upon preventive proceedings ; but the writ ought not to issue where it will work oppressively, or where the plaintiff by his own acts has put himself in a position that he ought not to ask it, as where he would enjoin the defendant from continuing a quarry on a public street, or on land over which plaintiff claims an easement of right of way, which quarry defendant opened in good faith, induced in a great measure to do so by the fact that plaintiff at the time was, and for years be*482fore had been, quarrying in the middle of the same pretended street and in the same block.

2. On the motion for assessment of damages, a jury was waived, and the finding and judgment were for $410, of which sum the court allowed $300 for counsel fees, $100 for time lost by defendants, and $10 for expenses of deeds. The court declared the law to be, that no counsel fees can be recovered as damages beyond the reasonable value of services necessary to obtain a dissolution of the injunction, and that testimony as to the value of services in resisting the original application, and of all other services, must be disregarded. The court had admitted, against the objection of plaintiffs, testimony that the reasonable value of all the services of counsel for defendant in the case was $500, which included services for resisting the original application. Plaintiffs introduced testimony tending to show that the reasonable value of the services of counsel in obtaining the dissolution was not over $250.

We see nothing in all this that calls for our interference. The court could probably judge as well as the witness what the services were worth, and it did not consider, in arriving at their value, any illegal testimony, as appears from the declaration of law. It may be, that it was difficult to present the testimony as to the value of the services of counsel without making a lumping estimate, from which the court could determine what the particular services for which plaintiffs are liable were fairly worth. The charge does not seem to be at all exorbitant; and we think there was some evidence to support the finding in this respect. We think that any actual loss of time necessarily occasioned to defendants by the proceedings, was loss and injury sustained by defendants within the meaning of the statute. It appears that there was testimony that, in consultation with counsel and collecting necessary testimony to procure a dissolution of the injunction, defendants lost time exceeding $100 in value.

We think the judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.

All the judges concur.