111 Va. 254 | Va. | 1910
delivered the opinion of the court.
On January 16, 1906, the appellant entered into a contract in writing with the appellee by which he agreed to sell and convey to it ten acres of land in the city of Roanoke, the eastern line to be the line of Trueman and Plunkett; the northern line to be Pleasant avenue; the southern line to be Roanoke river; and the western line to i’un through the lands of appellant at such point as ten acres surveyed will locate it. Subsequently appellant had the land surveyed, and in conformity with such survey executed and delivered a deed to appellee which both parties supposed contained ten acres.
The bill in this case was filed in July, 1906, by the appellant, alleging that shortly after the deed was executed and delivered to the appellee by him he discovered that the tract of land thereby conveyed contained more than ten acres, as the result of a mistake in the survey which he had followed in making the deed; and that the survey by which the deed was made did not conform to the boundaries prescribed by the contract. The bill further alleged that the appellee association, claiming to act under the authority of a resolution
The bill 'makes the appellee association and the city of Boanoke parties defendant, and prays that each be enjoined and restrained from obstructing Pleasant avenue in the manner alleged in the bill, or in any way interfering with the right of appellant to the unlimited enjoyment of the use of the entire street or highway. The prayer of the bill, further, is that the alleged mistake in the deed executed and delivered by the appellant to the appellee association be corrected and the deed made to conform to the intention of the parties.
The city of Boanoke answered the bill asserting its power to authorize the fencing up of part of Pleasant avenue to be used for fair-ground purposes, and denying that the appellant was injured thereby. The answer of the appellee association asserts the same propositions contended for by the city of Boanoke, and claims that the tract of land conveyed to it by the appellee contained .13 of an acre less than ten acres, and asks that the purchase price be abated accordingly.
The circuit court granted an injunction in accordance with the prayer of the bill, and subsequently, on August 6,1906, dis
We are of opinion that the court erred in its decree of August 6, 1906, dissolving the injunction theretofore granted restraining the appellee association from obstructing Pleasant avenue in the manner alleged in the bill.
The record shows that Pleasant avenue is a public highway, and this being so the city of Roanoke had no power or authority, in the absence of a grant from the. General Assembly, to confer upon the appellee association the right to fence up any part of such highway and to erect the buildings complained of thereon. No such authority is found in its charter, or the general law.
It is Avell settled that public higlrways, whether they be in the country or in a city, belong, not partially, but entirely, to the public at large, and that the supreme control 0Aer them is in the legislature. It is also an established general rule that any unauthorized obstruction which unnecessarily impedes or incommodes the huvful use of a highway is a public nuisance at common law.
The city of Roanoke having no legislative, authority to grant the use of Pleasant avenue for the purposes here complained of, its ordinance was a nullity, and furnished no warrant for the act of the appellee association in fencing up onelialf of this public highway and building sheds, stables and other buildings thereon for fair-ground purposes. Richmond City v. Smith, 101 Va. 161, 43 S. E. 345.
The appellant contends that Pleasant avenue is sixty-five feet wide, and we think that contention is sustained by the evidence. The effect of the conclusion that Pleasant avenue is seventy-five feet wide is to put its southern line in and upon the enclosed property of the appellant, a distance of ten feet, thus making it necessary to move the western line of the land sold considerably upon the property reserved by the appellant in order to make up the ten acres sold by appellee.
It appears from the record that the land in controversy is part of a tract of about seventy acres, which was conveyed in October, 1890, by the Roanoke Land and Improvement Company to the Pleasant Yalley Land Company. This last-named company, with the purpose of selling the land off into lots for residences, had a map prepared showing the seventy acres laid off into streets and alleys, and among other streets shown thereon was Pleasant avenue, with a width of seventy-five feet. This map is the basis of the claim now made that, in ascertaining the northern boundary of the ten acres sold by appellant to appellee, Pleasant avenue must be held to have a width of seventy-five feet. The Pleasant Yalley Land Company sold a few lots with reference to this map, but none of the lots so sold were near to the property involved in this controversy. Like all similar enterprises started at and about that time, the Pleasant Yalley Land Company failed, and in May, 1896, reconveyed the tract of land to the Roanoke Land and Improvement Company in discharge of a large balance of purchase money secured thereon by deed of trust, making certain reservations not material in this connection. Some time before this conveyance was made, the grantor, recogniz
It is not necessary to determine whether or not the map which the Pleasant Valley Land Company had made in 1890 was recorded in accordance with the statute, for if its recordation were admitted and constituted at that time a dedication, it was never acted upon by opening the streets and alleys designated thereon for the public use, and it would be, as said by this court in a very similar case, nevertheless true, that so far as the unopened streets are concerned the dedication was inchoate merely, and had been abrogated by subsequent events. The general purpose of the dedication has failed: the property has been sold with a view to changed conditions; and these circumstances, coupled with the continuous failure of the public, during all these years, to open and maintain these streets, together with the systematic diversion of the land included in them to uses foreign to the dedication, all furnish unmistakable evidence of their abandonment. Any other conclusion would work great injustice to the present holders of the property.
Pleasant avenue being established and used by the public as a highway sixty-five feet wide, with its southern line
For these reasons the decrees appealed from must be reversed, and the cause remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings not in conflict with this opinion.
Reversed.