143 P. 994 | Or. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a decree dismissing his suit instituted to determine an adverse title to real property and establishing the defendant’s easement in and right of possession of a part of Third Street in Prineville, Oregon, 49 feet along that highway and 80 feet across it. The plaintiff’s alleged title
It appears from the transcript herein that Monroe Hodges secured from the United States a grant of public land in what is now Crook County, Oregon. He thereafter caused a part of the premises to he surveyed and platted as the town of Prineville. Attached to the plat, a copy of which was received in evidence, is a sealed instrument executed by him and his wife, hut not containing any grant to the public of the use of the streets and alleys delineated on the map. The certificate of the notary public taking the acknowledgment, however, is to the effect that Hodges and his wife executed the instrument “for the purpose of making the same a public record, and to dedicate to the public use the streets and alleys therein mentioned, and to fix the boundaries of the streets, blocks and lots in said town.” The plat was duly recorded July 31, 1883. On the west side of the land so surveyed is block 7, which is separated from block 14, immediately north thereof, by Third Street.
Lucy S. Booth, the plaintiff’s wife, in the fall of 1891, secured the legal title to the north one third of block 7, and thereupon with her husband established a residence on the premises. At that time the north boundary of the land so obtained by her was fenced. Hodges then owned block 14 and had a fence on the south line thereof. He had also built a fence across the street where it is now obstructed, from his south
“Commencing at a point one hundred and ninety-one feet west of the southeast corner of block 14 of M. Hodges’ plat of Prineville, Oregon; thence west to the east bank of Crooked River to low-water mark; thence south along said east bank of Crooked River to a point due west of the northeast corner of block 7, of said M. Hodges’ plat; thence east to a point due south of the point of beginning; thence due north to point of beginning. ’ ’
This deed was recorded February 5, 1898.
The south boundary of block 14 as platted is divided by the survey into three lots, each 80 feet wide, so that by measuring west from the southeast corner of the block 191 feet, as specified in the deed, 49 feet of the street remains. The defendant’s original easement therein for the use of the public as a highway is conceded, so it will not be necessary to consider the effect of any conveyance made by Hodges of land in the town of Prineville by reference to lots and blocks indicated on the plat from which a dedication of the streets may be implied. It remains, therefore, to be seen' whether the defendant’s right of possession has been lost by the- occupation of the plaintiff and his grantors.
The testimony conclusively shows that from some time prior to the year 1889 to the trial of this cause the
It follows that the decree should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Affirmed.