276 Mo. 59 | Mo. | 1918
This is ejectment, instituted February 27, 1912, in the circuit court for the city of St. Louis, to recover a strip of land in said city twenty feet wide, extending one thousand, one hundred and seventy feet north and south from the north line of Manchester Eoad to the south line of Bischoff Avenue, and bounded on the west by a line at all points thirty feet east of the west line of Cooper Street.
The defendant city claims the land as a part of Cooper Street, and in its answer admits its possession, and denies the other allegations of the petition. As an affirmative defense it pleads that the strip of ground was dedicated to public use as a public highway, by a plat of dedication executed May 26, 1868, and filed in the recorder’s office of the city of St. Louis on or about the tenth day of June, 1869, by John H. Bobb, now deceased, and William C. Jamison, as trustees, and by Julia A. Letcher and Julia A. Ashbrook. That said parties stated in the dedication that they were owners of the said strip and that the dedication was accepted by the public and thrown open to public use, and has ever since been openly and notoriously used as a part of the street and that plaintiff is barred of whatever right he might otherwise have by the Statute of Limitations. As a second special defense it pleaded that about May 26, 1868, the said Bobb and William C. Jamison, trustees, together with Julia. A. Letcher and Julia A. Ashbrook, executed a plat dedicating the strip to public use forever, as a public highway known as Cooper Street, and that in said plat and dedication they represented themselves to be the owners. That said plat was filed in the recorder’s office of the city of St. Louis on the 10th day of June, 1869, and that the city thereupon accepted said strip so dedicated as a public highway, and that it was opened and has been used as such ever since, and improved by the city by paving the roadway, putting in sidewalks, sewers, lamp posts and other improvements located thereon, by all of which the plaintiff is estopped from asserting title. For a third defense it pleads that since about the year 1869, the city has carried upon the public records of its street department Cooper Street as a public highway fifty feet wide between Manchester Road and Bischoff Avenue, and believing that it had good title and ignorant of plaintiff’s
Isaac A. Letcher is the common source of title, having acquired the land in which this strip is included in 1838, and it is admitted that in 1862 the title had become well vested by deeds in Julia A. Letcher, his wife, and John Letcher, Robert F. Letcher, Jacob J. Letcher and Julia A. Ashbrook, his children, the last named having intermarried with one Levi L. Ashbrook. On August 6, 1862, Robert F. Letcher conveyed his undivided one-fifth of the ten acres to his mother, and Mrs. Ashbrook, who, on June 27, 1866, conveyed an undivided one-fifth of the ten acres to William C. Jamison and John H. Bobb for the sole use and benefit of Robert F. Letcher for life, and at his death to the use of Julia A. Letcher and Julia A. Ashbrook, and the survivor of them for life, and at the death of the survivor to the use and benefit of the children and descendants of Mrs. Ashbrook according to the law of descents and distributions, then to the heirs of Julia A. Letcher. The husband of Mrs. Ashbrook joined in this conveyance.
Up to June 10, 1869, Cooper Street between Mancheseer Road and Bischoff Avenue had been a public road thirty feet wide, including none of the land in controversy. On that day there was filed in the office of the recorder of deeds for St. Louis County, the plat of Fairmont Addition. It was signed by Julia A. Letcher and Julia A. Ashbrook and husband, and also by William C. Jamison and John H. Bobb as trustees, and dedicated, among other streets, Cooper Street fifty feet in width, which included the strip now in controversy. This plat and dedication was unsealed and constitutes the only express dedication of the land to public use as a street. The owners were then all in possession of said land. There was a fence, or at least the remains of a fence, between this strip and the thirty feet origi
In December, 1870, Abraham Siegel and John H. Bobb had become owners in fee of the entire ten acres, and so continued until September 17, 1884, when Bobb conveyed his interest to Siegel, who remained in possession as owner until January 5, 1887, when he conveyed it to the Planet Property & Financial Company, which remained in possession as owner until 1904, when it conveyed to John H. Bobb. The defendant city took exclusive possession of the strip sued for in 1909, and has continued in possession ever since. There was some evidence of its use by the public before that time.
John H. Bobb died March 10, 1910, leaving a will by which he devised all his residuary estate, including any interest he may have had in said land at the time -f his death, to this plaintiff, who is his widow, and claims the property in question under the will. At the trial evidence was introduced relating to the possession and use of the property by the parties interested or claiming an interest therein, including the public.
The cause was heard by the court without the intervention of a jury, and numerous declarations of law in the nature of instructions were asked by the plaintiff, some of which were given as asked, others modified by the court and given, and others refused.
Both plaintiff and defendant requested the court in writing to state in writing its conclusions of fact as found by the court separately from its conclusions of law, in accordance with the provisions of Section 1972, Revised Statutes 1909. This it did after stating the facts agreed upon by the parties, as follows: “From them the court concludes that the only fact or facts which it is expected to find relate to a right-of-way over the land in question, acquired by adverse user for a period of more then ten years before the commencement of this suit. Considering this testimony, while keeping in mind the fact that the public had already acquired a right-of-way over, a road thirty feet wide, and adjoining the land in question on the
The court thereupon declared the law as follows: “The court, of its own motion, declares the law applicable to the facts in this case as follows, to-wit:
“First. "Where two or more persons, assuming to be the owners of land adjoining a public highway, undertake in the manner prescribed by the statutes of this State to dedicate a strip thereof for the purpose of widening said highway, and where the instrument signed by them purports on its face to be the act of the owners of said strip, and contains no limitations or exceptions as to the interest which it purports to dedicate, such an instrument is in the nature of a grant, and carries with it a representation or assurance of title in the nature of a warranty, especially where the owners of other tracts of land have joined in the same instrument for the purpose of widening, opening and dedicating continuous streets, according to a general plan. If the instrument so executed is defective, owing to the fact that one or more persons having an interest in common with the dedicators fail to join in the instrument, still it is binding upon those who do join, and if after so executing and recording such instrument those, or any of those who are joined therein, acquire the outstanding interest of those who did not join, the outstanding interest so acquired inures to the benefit of the grant, and renders the title of the grantee complete. In such case the dedicator who acquires an outstanding interest is estopped to maintain any claim for such outstanding interest as against a grantee in his deed of dedication.
“Second. And where one or more of the persons who join in the execution of a deed of dedication, in the circumstances mentioned in the foregoing declaration, in a representive capacity, as trustee, for example, and without, as here, disclosing for whom he assumes
“Third. It appears from the agreed statement that John H. Bobb, who joined in the deed of dedication as trustee, on March 16, 1910, by mesne conveyance, acquired the outstanding interests of John Letcher, Jacob J. Letcher and Robert F. Letcher, if any he had, in the land in question, and who did not join in the deed of dedication. John H. Bobb was then estopped to maintain any claim based upon the outstanding interest which he had thus acquired as against the grantee in the deed of dedication to which he was a party, and his devisee, Clara P. Bobb, the plaintiff herein, is likewise estopped.
“It follows, therefore, that judgment must go in favor of the defendant.” To which declaration of law the plaintiff duly excepted.
Judgment was thereupon entered for defendant and this appeal duly taken.
I. The appellant insists that dedications to public use by a plat made pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 44, General Statutes 1865, are void if unsealed. This gea] statute does not require the formality of a seal, either' in express terms or by implication. It has no connection with the subject treated in Section 1 of Chapter 109 of the same statutes, providing that “conveyance of lands or any interest therein may be made by deed . . . acknowledged and recorded as herein directed, without any other act or ceremony whatever.” Chapter 44 provides with equal distinctness that dedications may be made by plat acknowledged and recorded as therein provided. Whether' they should be sealed was for the Legislature to determine.
After flitting in and out and around Mr. Bobb for thirty-five years it finally settled upon him and, in 1904, he became seized of the title in fee simple and remained the absolute owner until his decease in 1910. The truth asserted itself, and the untrue became true. It’ is unnecessary to refer to Mrs. Bobb, his devisee and appellant here, because it is not questioned that she stands in the same relation to the title as would her deceased husband were he living and prosecuting this suit. The question is thus presented whether he could, if living, successfully claim the title as against this dedication. In answering it, it is unnecessary to notice that he executed the instrument as “trustee.” The interests of his beneficiaries are not involved. The execution of the plat and the statement that the signers were the owners was, in law, an assertion not only that they had the title, but of power to perform the act. The sole question is whether by the execution of the plat Mr. Bobb was estopped from denying the title which it asserted and upon which it rested. The statute under which the declaration was made must be looked to for the answer. It provides (Gr. S. 1865, ch. 44, sec. 1) that the plat shall set forth and describe “all the parcels of ground within such . . . addition reserved for public purposes, by their boundaries, course and extent, whether they be intended for avenues, streets, lanes, aiie.vs, commons or other public uses.” It further provides (Sec. 8) that such plat “shall be a sufficient conveyance to vest the fee of such parcels of land as are therein named, described or intended for public uses in such city, town or village, when incorporated, in trust and for the uses therein named, expressed or intended, and for no other use or purpose. If such city, town or village shall not be incorporated, then the fee of such
There can be no doubt that under this statute the plat made in pursuance of its terms constituted a grant of this particular land to St. Louis County and that when it was incorporated in the city the title passed with it. The statute designates the instrument as a “conveyance” and we can see no l'eason why it should not have the same effect as a divestiture of the dedicator and investiture of the public in the title and its incidents to the extent provided, including the quality of estoppel, that inheres in any other grant or conveyance. The reasons for the application of the doctrine of estoppel in cases of this character seems much stronger than those which apply to private grants, because there is not only a public interest involved, but every person becoming a proprietor upon the faith of the dedication has a private interest in the title which supports it; yet it is a well settled general principle that no man shall be allowed to dispute his own solemn deed by saying that he had no interest in the land at the time of his conveyance. [2 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), p. 392, and authorities cited.] This rule applies with still greater force and reason against one who makes a personal claim against his conveyance made in a fiduciary capacity. [Id. p. 397.] We see nothing in the Missouri cases cited by the appellant which bears upon the facts of this case, unless it be the remark of this court in City of St. Louis v. Laclede Gas Light Company, 96 Mo. l. c. 198, to the effect that “perhaps one tenant in common may himself be estopped to deny his grant of an easement in the common property; but he cannot create an easement in such property as against his co-tenant.” This is the precise position we are now taking.
We hold that by the representation of title expressly made by Mr. Bobb in the act of dedication executed by him' in 1869, as well as by the representations necessarily implied by the character of that instrument,
PER CURIAM: — The foregoing opinion of Brown, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court;