Court Opinion

ID: 7363879
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:49:42.179349+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:42.287670
License: Public Domain

SiMPSON, J.
The bill'in this case was filed by'the appellants against the appellees, alleging that complainants are the owners of certain lots in Bessemer, Ala., some fronting on Arlington avenue find abutting on an alley between Arlington and Berkley avenue’s, and some abutting on an alley between Arlington' avenue and Carolina avenue; that respondents are constructing, or" are about to construct, across said Arlington avenue ánd said alleys, a fill'or other obstruction, upon which is to be run a line of railroad, said fill to' be about 30 feet high, blocking the whole of said avenue except about 3Ó feet in the center, and completely blocking one end of the alleys, thus causing irreparable injury and damage; and also that it will create a public and private nuisance in said' public highways. The bill prays for an injunction restraining the construction of said work. The preliminary, injunction was granted, and cm the coming in of the answer was, on motion, dissolved. It is from this decree that the appeal is taken.
The answer, while admitting the formal parts of the bill as to names of parties, location of streets, ets., denies that there is any intention to make a fill across Arlington avenue, alleging that the purpose is to cross that avenue *276by a viaduct, at an elevation of 30 feet, supported by abutments on either side, on the property of respondents, but that they do propose to make a fill across one alley, about 25 feet high; but it alleges that the lots on each side of said alley, at the point of crossing, belong to respondents, and that complainants’ lot (15) is ¡200 feet distant, and also that respondents are the owners of the lots on either side of the other alley (in block B), and also that there will be a fill at the end of this alley similar to the other, but that the abutting land belongs to respondents, and said alleys have been vacated by act of the Legislature approved July 31,1907, which is attached as an exhibit. A plat of the various blocks and lots is attached as an exhibit, showing the line of the railroad, passing entirely through the .lands of respondent, and that the lots of complainants have ingress and egress both through the other end of said alleys and through Arlington avenue. There are also general denials of the alleged injury and damage, and it is averred that the complainants will not sustain any special damage, other than that which applies to other citizens, and that said respondent railroad company is entirely solvent, and that said railroad was being constructed in accordance with authority granted by the city of Bessemer. Th.e complainants filed exceptions to that part of the answer setting up the act of Legislature and the ordinance of the city, claiming the same to be unconstitutional.
It is contended by appellants that the answer does . not deny the material allegations of the bill, and they cite, as instances of such failure, that the answer fails to deny “the ownership of the property,” etc. The law does not require that every allegation which, in connection with others, would form a chain of materiality, must be denied; for, if that were the law, an injunction *277could never be dissolved on account of tbe denials of the answer, since in every case there are numerous details leading up to the main allegations of the complaint, which cannot be denied. If the averments, without which there would be no equity in the bill, are denied, that is a sufficient denial. — lb Ency. PL & Pr. 1067; Rogers v. Bradford et al., 29 Ala. 474; Moore v. Barclay, 23 Ala. 739; Rice v. Tobias, 83 Ala. 348, 3 South. 670; Howle et al. v. Scarbrough, 138 Ala. 148, 35 South. 113. It becomes necessary, then, to consider the question of the validity of the act of the Legislature vacating the alleys; for manifestly, if that act be valid, there was no alley at the point indicated, but the property therein had reverted to the defendants, who own the abutting property on each side.
This matter has been so recently considered by this court it seems useless to cite the numerous authorities elsewhere on the subject. This court has held distinctly that the Legislature has the power to vacate streets, either by direct act, or by act authorizing the municipal authorities to do so, and that a property owner does not bring himself within the protection of section 235 of the Constitution of 1901, unless he shows that he is an “abuting owner.”- — Southern Ry. Co. v. Albes, 153 Ala. 523, 45 South. 234. 135; Jackson v. Birmingham Foundry, etc., Co., 154 Ala. 464, 45 South. 660. Beyond the abutting owner, the only limit to the power of the Legislature to abolish a street is that the property owners along the street shall not be deprived of a “convenient and reasonable outlet to neighboring thoroughfares.” — Jackson v. Birmingham, ets., Co., supra; Elliott on Boads & Streets (2nd Ed.) § 878. The bill in this case does not claim that complainants have been deprived of a reasonable outlet, but only that one end of the alley is obstructed. This act, then, is not- violative of section 235 of the Constitution of 1901.
*278It cannot be said that this is new matter set np in the answer, which cannot be considered on a motion to dissolve; for the gist of the answer on this point is a denial of the allegation that said railroad crosses an alley at all, the same having been abolished by. the Legislature. It follows, then, that the argument and authorities on the subject of .nuisances on a public street or alley have no application in so far as the supposed alleys are contraed; for.it is denied that there are any such alleys at said point.'
In so far as Arlington avenue is concerned, the answer denies, any intention to obstruct ,it..
. It cannot be said that complainants’ property has been.in any way injured by the construction of the railway, not over any alley, but simply over the land of respondents, as it is not charged that any injury, accrued to said property by the embankment, other than the deprivation of the right to travel over the property (in common with every other citizen), which had been destroyed by the vacation of the alleys.
The decree'of the court is affirmed.
Tyson, O. J., and Dowdell and Denson, JJ., concur.