28 A. 766 | R.I. | 1894
Under the provisions of Pub. Laws R.I. cap. 1018, the City of Providence condemned a tract of land adjoining Roger Williams Park, which was formerly owned by John Anthony, ancestor of these plaintiffs, and which had been platted and sold to George L. Tucker. At the trial before the jury to assess the value of the land several questions arose as to Tucker's ownership and right to compensation, which are now withdrawn. It is agreed that he was the owner of the lots so taken, and the Anthony heirs withdraw all claim therefor against the city; and said Tucker withdraws all claim against the city for the land laid out for the streets. The jury having awarded Tucker the value of the lots and found that the value of the land in the streets was nothing, the Anthony heirs now petition for a new trial upon the ground that they were owners of the fee of the streets and entitled to be paid therefor by the city, and that the presiding justice erred in refusing to instruct the jury that the deed to Tucker, which described the land only by numbers on the plat, excluded the soil of the streets.
It appears that John Anthony left this State in 1851, and the next year he gave to Joseph G. Johnson a power of attorney to sell his real estate. The John Anthony plat was made in 1854, and it is claimed that it must have been made by Johnson, who had no authority under the power of attorney to plat land; that such platting did not bind these heirs and that the title to the streets remains in them. The language *701 of the power of attorney was very comprehensive. It gave full authority to sell any or all of the real estate of the principal. The attorney could sell in bulk or parcels, the mode of sale being unrestricted. The platting of land is a very common step towards its sale, and the laying out of ways, if the sale be in parcels, is often necessary. It may be incidental to the exercise of such full authority as was granted to Johnson. Such power is quite distinct from an attempt to dedicate the land of another to the public. In this case the sale was of all the lots and so of all the land. The deed given by Johnson as attorney described the land as one hundred and thirteen lots in the town of Cranston, giving their numbers without reference to the plat. The plat itself was fully identified in evidence, the land was sold by that plat; the lots were checked thereon as they were compared with the deed; the plat was delivered with the deed and the grantee was put into possession of the land by the attorney. Under these facts, the agreement, which in effect ratifies the acts of the attorney and waives all exceptions to extrinsic proof, and the consequent judgment for Tucker as to the lots, settle his title to them as lots on the plat.
The main question then is, whether the conveyance of the lots carried a title to the streets. The great importance of ownership in a highway to an abutting owner is so manifest that courts on grounds of public policy, have established the presumption that a deed which bounds land on a highway is intended to go to the middle of the way, unless the contrary appears. As Kent says: "The established inference of law is, that a conveyance of land bounded on a public highway carries with it the fee to the centre of the road, as part and parcel of the grant. The idea of an intention in the grantor to withhold his interest in a road to the middle of it, after parting with all his right and title to the adjoining land, is never to be presumed." 3 Kent Comment. *433. Various reasons are given for the inference, as that "the way was taken out of the party that hath other lands adjoining;"Healey v. Babbitt,
The trouble in this class of cases has been that courts have not held to the rule that the intention of a grantor to withhold his interest in a road is never to be presumed. It has been presumed from the use of words such as "along" and "by the side of," when there has been no express reservation and probably none intended. But the terms of boundary on a highway are seldom significant. As Judge Redfield says in the dissenting opinion inBuck v. Squiers,
As to a grantee, if the way be shown upon a plat referred to in the deed, it is a street and it makes no difference whether it has been open or not. Bissell v. N.Y. Central Railroad;Dobson v. Hohenadel, supra. The legal effect of the deed which gave Tucker title to the lots on the John Anthony plat, gave him title to the lots on the John Anthony plat, gave him title to the streets on which the lots in fact were bounded.
There was, therefore, no error in the refusal of the presiding justice to instruct the jury as requested. This conclusion as to the effect of the deed disposes of all the grounds for a new trial which are now before us; for since the petitioners have no title to the streets in question, their petition for a new trial must be denied.
After the foregoing opinion, the plaintiffs asked for a reargument and filed additional briefs.
October 17, 1894. The court handed down a rescript announcing that it adhered to its former opinion.