City of Baton Rouge v. Cross
City of Baton Rouge v. Cross
Opinion of the Court
The city of Baton Rouge having ordered the laying of sidewalks upon Champagne street upon which the property of defendant abuts, and having ordered all encroachments upon "said street obstructing the laying of said sidewalk to be removed, this is a suit against defendant to compel him to remove from the street his row of frame cottages which encroach from four inches to two feet upon said street.
Defendant’s main reliance is upon article 862 of the Civil Code, which reads:
“If the works, formerly constructed on public soil,' consist of houses or other buildings, which cannot be destroyed, without causing signal damage to the owner of them, and if these houses or other buildings merely encroach upon the public way, without preventing its use, they shall be permitted to remain, but the owner shall be bound, when he rebuilds them, to relinquish that part of the soil of the public way, upon which they formerly stood.”
In Village of Moreauville v. Boyer, 138 La. 1070, 71 South. 187, relied upon by defendant, the facts were that, for the building of a new levee and the providing of a new public road along the levee on the land side the yard of . Boyer was being taken without compensation, in the exercise of the servitude of levee and of road due the public by riparian proprietors, and an anciently constructed building was sought to be removed simply because it encroached slightly beyond the new property line that was being established for Boyer’s property. Between such a case and that of some frame cottages recently built upon an existing street in a city, there is, of course, no analogy.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the judgment of the Court of Appeal be amended so as to read as follows: It
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CITY OF BATON ROUGE v. CROSS. In re CROSS
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by Editorial Staff.) 1. Municipal Corporations Baton Rouge Charter (Act No. 169 of 1898) § 20, authorizing the city council to open, establish, and vacate streets, improve streets and sidewalks and regulate the manner of .paving and repairing them and the use thereof, and to keep streets clean and in repair, etc., expressly authorized the city to cause the removal of obstructions from the streets, and, if not expressly conferred, the city would have such power under the provision of that section giving the council power to enact all laws and ordinances necessary for the general welfare of the city and its inhabitants. 2. Municipal Corporations Civ. Code, art. 862, providing that if works formerly constructed on public soil consists of houses or other buildings which cannot be destroyed without signal damage to the owner, and if they merely encroach upon the public way without preventing its use they shall be permitted to remain, but that the owner shall be bound when he rebuilds to relinquish that part of the soil of the public way upon which they formerly stood, had no application to frame cottages recently constructed and encroaching from four inches to two feet upon the street, whore they could be moved back so as not to encroach upon the street at a cost of $35 each, as this' cost was not “signal damage” within the statute, and while the destruction of the encroaching portion of the cottages in case the owner refused to permit them to be removed would constitute signal damage, it would be damage of the owner’s own choosing within the rule volenti non fit injuria. 3. Costs 234 — On Appeal — Modification op Judgment. In a suit by a city to compel the removal of so much of a row of cottages as encroached on the street, the modification of a judgment in favor of the city so as to order the removal of the protruding parts of the cottages unless defendant should remove the encroachment himself, or consent to the sheriff moving the houses back clear from the street, was not a sufficient change in the decree to throw the costs in the Supreme Court on the city.