Court Opinion

ID: 8011000
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:58:10.915891+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:36:04.752951
License: Public Domain

Black, P. J.
— The city of St. Louis, by an ordinance enacted in due form of law, set apart that portion of Third and Broadway streets between Christy avenue and Howard street, as a market “for farmers and other wagons bringing produce to market for sale;” and by ordinance gave the comptroller power to lease stands on and along that portion of the streets to such vendors of produce. The comptroller gave public notice that he would on a given date lease the stands for one year from the first of April, 1890; and thereupon the plaintiffs brought this suit to enjoin the defendants from leasing stands in front of their property. The court awarded a perpetual injunction as prayed for and the defendants appealed.
*134The evidence discloses the following further facts: Third and Broadway constitute one continuous street.. The plaintiff, Conrad Schopp, owns a parcel of land with a building thereon fronting twenty feet on the west side of Third, street, and the plaintiffs Lewedag & Co., are his tenants. The'plaintiff, Jacob Schopp, owns another parcel with buildings thereon fronting on the east side of Third street, occupied by the plaintiffs, the Jacob Schopp & Brother Fruit and. Produce Company, a corporation organized under the-laws of this state. These tenants are engaged in the business of buying and selling, at wholesale and retail, fruits, vegetables and other garden produce. They carry on a large business. The street in front of their buildings is from fifty-five to sixty feet wide, and has .become a crowded thoroughfare for wagons and loaded vehicles because of cable railroads and the grades on adjacent streets. For four years prior to the commencement of this suit, the city had annually leased to hucksters spaces in front of the property owned and occupied by the plaintiffs, about ten feet wide and extending from the curb out into the street a distance of fifteen or seventeen feet. Spaces of ten to twenty feet wide were left between the spaces so leased. The hucksters and others leasing the spaces come in on all week-days before daylight, and back their wagons in on the leased spaces up against the curb. They stand on the sidewalk and sell their produce from their wagons. As a rule, they remain until eight or nine o’clock in the forenoon, but it appears they often remain until three o’clock in the afternoon. The proof is clear to the effect that these market wagons materially interfere with the business carried on by the plaintiffs, by causing the street to become blockaded; and they render it difficult and often impossible for the plaintiffs to get their wagons up to the curb in front of their houses. *135Parts of these streets between Christy avenue and Howard street have been used for such market purposes since 1861, and perhaps longer, but the street in front of the buildings owned and occupied by the plaintiffs was not so used until four years before the commencement of this suit.
An abutting property-owner has the same right to the use of the street that the public have, and, in addition thereto he has rights which are special to himself, as the right of ingress and egress, and this right is a property right which he may protect. Ferrenhach v. Turner, 86 Mo. 416; Glaessner v. Brewing Ass’n, 100 Mo. 508. An obstruction in a street or highway may be both a public and a private nuisance, and in such cases the private citizen who is specially injured may have injunctive relief. Glaessner v. Brewing Ass’n, supra; McDonald v. Newark, 42 N. J. Eq. 136; Elliott on Roads and Streets, 496. That the plaintiffs here are especially injured admits of no doubt, but it is insisted by the defendants that the city of St. Louis has the right and power to lease out portions of the street surface to hucksters and others for market purposes, and whether the city has such right is the real question in this case.
The scheme and charter of the city of St. Louis' gives to it, among others, the following powers: First, “to establish market places and meat shops, and license, regulate, sell, lease, abolish, or otherwise dispose of the same;” second, “to designate the place where such articles shall be sold,” that is to say, “meat, poultry, fish and vegetables; ” and third, “to regulate the use of the streets.” The powers conferred by the first and second of the above paragraphs are expressed in general words, and it cannot be said that they give the city any power to convert the public streets into market places. Says Dillon: “But power to a munici*136pal corporation to establish markets and build market houses will not give 'the authority to build on a public. street. Such erections are nuisances though made by the corporation,, because the street, and the entire street, is for the use of the whole people. They are nuisances when built upon the streets, although sufficient space be left for the passage of vehicles and persons. Dillon on Municipal Corporation [4' Ed.], sec. 383.” And the text has the support of the following cases: Wartman v. Philadelphia, 33 Pa. St. 202-210; State v. Mobile, 5 Port. (Ala.) 279; State v. Laverack, 34 N. J. Law 201. The case last cited goes much further and holds that the legislature has no power to authorize a market to be held in a public street of a city, without providing for compensation to abutting property owners, as to which proposition we express no opinion in the present case. If the city has any .power to lease out portions of the street surface to hucksters, it arises from the power “to regulate the use of streets.”
This power to regulate the use of streets is not confined to the regulation of travel thereon, but under it the city may allow gas, water and sewer pipes to be laid therein and may cause wells therein to be filled (Ferrenbach v. Turner, supra) and may permit the erection and maintenance of telephone poles thereon. Julia Building Ass’n v. Telephone Co., 88 Mo. 258. All these uses are consistent with the uses for which streets are acquired or dedicated. But it does not follow from anything said in any of the cases just cited that the city may lease out portions of the streets for huckster stands and stalls. A general power to regulate the use of streets cannot and ought not to be construed to give the city a right to create a nuisance in the streets, or devote them or any part thereof to any purpose inconsistent with the right of the public or abutting property owners. The “public .highways *137"belong, from side to side and end to end, to the public,” and “the public are entitled, not only to a free passage along the highway but to a free passage along any portion of it not in the actual use of some other traveler,” and the abutting property owner has the right to the free and unobstructed passage to and from his property.
Said Lord Ellenborough in Rex v. Cross, 3 Camp. 224, “And is there any doubt that if coaches on the occasion of a rout, wait an unreasonable length of time in the public street, and obstruct the transit of his Majesty’s subjects who wish to pass through it in carriages or on foot, the persons who cause and permit such coaches so to wait are guilty of a nuisance?” Teamsters may not unreasonably block the public way or stop their teams and vehicles for such a time and in such a place as to unreasonably interfere with the public travel. Elliott on Eoads and Streets, 481, and cases cited. Other cases are more directly in point here. Thus in McDonald v. Newark, 42 N. J. Eq. 137, the plaintiff owned and occupied a dwelling house fronting upon a public street. The. city permitted hucksters of vegetables and other country produce to occupy the side of the street in front of plaintiff’s house. The court held that this use of the street for a market place was both a public and a private nuisance, and awarded the plaintiff injunctive relief. See also People ex rel. v. Mayor, 59 Howard’s Prac. Rep., 278;
In the case now in hand the city proposes to lease out spaces of the street in front of the business houses owned and occupied by the plaintiffs, such spaces to be used daily for the sale of garden products and the like, to the special injury of the plaintiffs. Such a use of the street is unlawful, because inconsistent with the rights of the public and the plaintiffs. The judgment is therefore affirmed.
All concur.