85 Md. 396 | Md. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appeal in this case is from a pro forma decree, which dismissed a bill of complaint that had been filed to procure a specific performance of a written contract for the sale of land. The defence relied on in the answer, is that the appellant’s title to a small portion of the property is not merchantable, and three reasons are assigned in support of this position. The property comprises nearly all of one-half of a city block, in Baltimore, and fronts one hundred and sixty-two feet on Federal street, about three hundred and fifteen feet on Carter alley, including, in this distance, a road hereafter referred to; twenty-seven feet on Oliver street, and two hundred and fifteen feet on Barclay street, the southwest corner of the parallelogram formed by these three
The two objections first stated, being somewhat interwoven, may be considered together.
The intention of the parties to an instrument, as gathered from its four, corners, and from such foreign circumstances as may, under recognized rules of interpretation be invoked, must control and define its meaning unless some fixed, unbending canon of construction, or some settled and inflexible rule of property intervenes to frustrate or defeat that intention. This is such an obvious and elementary principle that neither discussion nor adjudged cases need be resorted to for its demonstration. Now, it seems perfectly clear that the grantors, in each of the deeds wherein the language, heretofore quoted, respecting the conveyance of Lanvale road has been used, did not, by employing that language, attempt the creation of an estate in fee to begin in futuro, as is insisted was the effect of the deed from Thackery, trustee, but, on the contrary, they undertook to transfer and convey all the estate which they possessed in the roadbed, subject to the easement in the public, so long as the road remained opened. By these conveyances no title was retained in the grantors, but their entire estate vested in the several grantees — the title to the bed of the road being held subordinate to the public easement, so long only as that easement should continue. Consequently, upon the cessation of that easement, from any cause, the title to the bed
This question is one by no means free from difficulty or unperplexed by conflicting decisions. There is a line of cases, proceeding upon the maxim, nullum tempus occurit regi, which holds that the rights of the public to a street or thoroughfare cannot be barred by non-user and that every act of asserted ownership, such as occupancy, hostile to the public use, is a nuisance which can never ripen into a private right by mere efflux of time. Whilst another series of cases, founded on the assumption that limitations run against the State or else that the maxim above cited does not apply to municipalities, holds that the same acts of adverse user and possession which would extinguish a private easement, will likewise destroy the easement of the public in a street or highway. The precise question, as we now have it presented, has not heretofore arisen in Maryland — at least our investigations, have not discovered, tnor have counsel in their arguments referred us to, any adjudication thereon; though there are three cases decided by this Court which explicitly hold that no right to maintain a public nuisance in the form of an encroachment on the highway can be acquired by prescription. To these cases we shall have oc
The second of these conflicting propositions is not' only not sustained by any adjudication in Maryland, but is directly in antagonism to what we apprehend to be the law of this State; whilst the first is wholly inapplicable to the case at bar for the simple reason that the title of the appellant to the road does not depend on prescription as against the public, but upon his deeds and the fact of an abandonment of the public easement whereby the rights of the public over the road were extinguished.
Whilst an encroachment on a highway is conclusively
Now, the facts in the record before us are sufficient, in our opinion, to create an equitable estoppel against the public to reassert a right to the use of Lanvale road; for the private rights that have grown up in consequence of an abandonment and total discontinuance of the road by the public, are of more persuasive force than those of the public. There is no evidence that this road was ever laid out by the municipal authorities, or that it was ever accepted by them or kept in repair at the public expense. The city has opened, graded and paved streets, some intersecting the road, some running parallel to it; and there obviously hav
If ever there was a case where the doctrine of equitable estoppel ought to prevail against the public it certainly is the case at bar; and we accordingly hold — not that the appellant has acquired by prescription a right to that part of Lanvale road between his two lots — but that having title thereto under his deeds subject to an easement in the public and the easement having been abandoned so that the public are equitably estopped to reclaim it, his title to the parcels of the road claimed by him is merchantable.
There is nothing in this view that conflicts in any way with the cases in 20, 21 and 83 Md., hereinbefore referred to. The first of those cases was briefly this: The P. W. & B. R. R. Co. in constructing its railroad crossed a county road below the grade of the latter and was required to build, a bridge over its tracks to connect the two roads of the intersected county road. The company built the bridge of considerably less width than the county road. More than
These cases are very different from this, where the evident and notorious abandonment of the road by the public as a road and its physical closing with the knowledge of the municipal authorities, induced innocent parties to assume that it was no longer a highway, and upon that well-founded assumption, to expend money in making permanent improvements upon and across it. In the three cases just alluded to the highways were not abandoned by the public as highways — they were being openly used as such — and there was in each case simply an attempt, in spite of the public user, to claim by adverse possession a part of the width of the streets or road at the very time the streets and the road' were being used continuously by the public as thoroughfares. These were cases of encroachment upon subsisting highways — not cases of abandonment of the highways at all. ■ Here, however, private rights have grown up in consequence of and founded on an abandonment by the public, but in the other instances there being no abandonment whatever; in fact, on the contrary, a continuous assertion of right in the public by actual user, no private rights in conflict with the rights of the public could or did accrue. The acts complained of in 20, 21 and 83 Md.. were public nuisances and so continued to be, and out of those nuisances no adverse individual rights arose.
We now come to the third and last objection and but a few words will be required to dispose of it. The deed of trust dated in 1861 was in legal effect a mortgage to secure certain named debts. It was nothing more. Even a deed absolute on its face will be treated as a mortgage whenever necessary to give effect to the manifest intention of the parties to it. Baugher v. Merryman, 32 Md. 185.
. There can be no doubt from the face of the deed that the obvious and single purpose of the parties to it, was to secure under it the payments of the debts particularly specified in it. Notwithstanding, then, its form, it must be treated as the parties to it intended it should be interpreted, and, therefore, must be given the effect of a mortgage and must be held to be subject to all the conditions that would be applicable to it had it been a formal, technical mortgage. Now, every note mentioned in the deed has been barred by limitations for more than thirty years, and whilst that fact alone woüld not defeat a right to foreclose a mortgage (B. & O. R. R. Co. v. Trimble, 51 Md. 111), still if the mortgage itself securing the notes is also barred, no decree can be procured upon it when a defence of limitations is made. Twenty years have been adopted by the Courts of this State as the period which bars the right of foreclosure, and as thirty years have intervened between the maturity of the mortgage and now, without recognition of its being a subsisting lien, the- bar is absolute and complete. Cook et al. v. Glenn et al., 30 Md. 55; Frazier v. Gelston et al., 33 Md. 298.
This disposes of ail the objections that have been interposed to the appellant’s title, and it will be seen from the views we have expressed that we are of opinion the title is merchantable. It follows, then, that the pro forma decree must be reversed and the cause must be remanded that a decree conforming to this opinion may be passed.
Decree reversed with costs above and. below and cause remanded.