This is a suit to quiet the title to an abandoned railroad right of way, a strip of ground 100 feet wide and approximately 1,760 feet in length through the town of Campbell. A public road parallels the right of way on the west and the defendants now own the abutting lots on the east side of the right of way. The plaintiffs are the heirs at law of Elijah Bray, who when he died in 1884 was then the ownei оf the quarter section of land through which the railroad was constructed. The trial court made seventeen specific findings of fact and seven conclusions of law, two оf which were that the plaintiffs had no right, title or interest whatever in the abandoned strip and that the seven sets of defendants as abutting landowners “have title superior to that of аppellants” and accordingly, upon the plaintiffs’ petition to quiet the title, the court found the issues in favor of the defendants and the plaintiffs have appealed аnd challenge, as a matter of law, these two findings and conclusions.
In 1877 Elijah Bray owned the quarter section of land in which the right of way and adjoining lots involved in this litigation are now located. Mr. Bray died intestate in 1884 and in 1896 his widow, then Mrs. N. M. Dalton, purported to grant to a lumber company “the use of a strip of land One hundred feet wide across my Lands * * * to be used for Railroad purposes only.” A railroad was constructed across the strip and was used and operated as a railroad until its abandonment in 1950. As stated, the defendants own the lots аnd tracts of land abutting the right of way on the east and a public road parallels the right of way on the west. Upon the abandonment of the railroad in 1950 the abutting owners went into рos
While the plaintiffs inferentially question the legality of the railroad’s acquisition of the right of way they cоncede a use or interest for railroad purposes “on prescription” and an easement. They say, however, that the “fee (simple title) was in the Bray children; they never parted with it.” They also argue that a railroad right of way “is not a public highway” and therefore urge that the rules governing abandoned public highways have no application to an abandoned railroad right of way. But, in its еssence the plaintiffs’ claim is that “When a railroad right of way is abandoned, title freed of the easement is in the original grantor, his heirs or assigns,” here the plaintiffs as the heirs at law of Elijah Bray. The appellants concede that “the Bray family sold off on both sides of the old right of way prior to its abandonment,” nevertheless, they point to the convеyances and argue, in contrast to the argument usually made, that the language and descriptions in these instruments are not subject to the “strained” construction of “intending to cоnvey the land in the right of way and as merely reserving the use of the right of way to the railroad.” This fact, they say, rebuts any presumption that the appellants or their predecеssors, by their conveyances, intended to part with or transfer their title to the fee in the abandoned right of way. It is contended that there is no evidence showing whether the right of wаy came out of land on its east side or on its west side, in fact, it is said, “It came right out of the middle of an 80 acres, all of which was owned by the Bray heirs.” Therefore it is argued, since the right of way is abutted on the west by a highway, there can be no presumption that the west 50 feet would “be attached to the owners on the East.”
We have attempted to set out the appellants’ argument in detail because they tacitly concede that Brown v. Weare,
The case upon which the appellants rely did not establish, as we understand the case, a rule contrary to that set forth in the Brown cаse or elsewhere for that matter. State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Griffith,
Here the plaintiff heirs at law own no land abutting the abandoned right of way and they do not own any land on the west side of the public road. “Exhibit D shows what the Bray family sold оff on both sides of the old right of way prior to its abandonment.” The only land or interest they, claim is in and to the right of way and the sole basis of their claim to that is as the heirs of Elijah Bray, the original owner of the fee. The chain of title of the respondent abutting owners is not shown in detail;^ it is admitted, however, that they are the abutting owners and if the Brays once ownеd all the land they must have been in the .respondents’ chain of title. In these circumstances, we repeat, “we are definitely committed to the view that ‘the fee (subject to the easement) remains in those who owned the land at the time of its dedication to public use, and in their successors in title; and if ever the streets and alleys are vacated and their public use abandoned, the original owners, or their grantees, will thereafter hold the same freed from the burden of the former public use.’ ” Eureka Real Estate & Investment Co. v. Southern Real Estate & Financial Co.,
PER CURIAM.
The foregoing opinion by BARRETT, C., is adopted as the opinion of the Court.
