79 So. 566 | Ala. | 1918
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *197 This cause was submitted and considered under Rule 46,1 and the opinion of the court was delivered by Mr. Justice THOMAS.
Appellee filed her bill to enjoin the city of Mobile from laying a sanitary sewer along a certain street or property in that city. The chancery court decreed that appellee was entitled to the relief prayed, but, recognizing the city's right of eminent domain, allowed the municipality 30 days within which to institute condemnation. Const. §§ 23, 235. Appellants obtained a supersedeas, and brought this appeal.
The averments of the bill were that:
Appellee is the owner of a "parcel of land in the city of Mobile described as that part of the south two-thirds of the south half of the southern division of the Bernoudy tract lying east of Old Water street, which parcel of land is bounded on the south by the south line of the Bernoudy tract, on the north by a line parallel to said south line of the said Bernoudy tract and 296 feet and 10 2/3 inches north thereof, on the west by Old Water street and on the east by Mobile river; that your oratrix, by and through tenants holding under her, has been in the actual occupancy of the said parcel of land for approximately ten years, and still maintains such occupancy; that in addition to such possession she has a good and valid title thereto, unquestioned and undisputed except in so far as concerns the claim asserted by the said city of Mobile. * * * That no street has ever been opened or used through the said premises, but if Virginia street in the city of Mobile were projected east from Old Water street to the river, which is a distance of about 1,800 feet, it would pass through the said premises and include a strip 50 feet wide extending east and west entirely through the north side of the said premises and so close to the north line as to leave thereof a strip only about 13 inches in width to the north of the street so projected. * * * That the city of Mobile has authorized the construction of a large sewer coming east on Virginia street from the western portion of the city, and has planned and contemplates the running of said sewer through the aforesaid premises of your oratrix along the line of what would be Virginia street were it projected through said premises. * * * That the said city of Mobile claims that the said Virginia street extends east of the Old Water street and to the river, and that it, the said city, has the power and authority to use the space which would be embraced in said street if it were so extended and for any purpose for which a public street may be used by the municipal authorities; that the said city claims the right to lay the said sewer through the said premises of your oratrix and along the line of what would be said street if projected east from Old Water street to the river, and, under the force and power which it can exercise as a governmental body through its police officers, will take and use the said premises for said purpose unless restrained therefrom by an injunction from this honorable court; that the said sewer will be permanent in its nature, and such taking and user of a portion of the said premises of your oratrix will involve and constitute a permanent appropriation thereof, which, if permitted to continue, will ripen into an easement, and result in the destruction of your oratrix's ownership and right to said property; that it will also constitute a continuing trespass of such nature that it will cause to your oratrix irreparable damage."
Appellee's counsel, in a word, thus further states the substance of his bill:
"It is further alleged that the claim of the city to the effect that the property in dispute is a street is unfounded and erroneous; that it was never dedicated as a street, or if there was such a dedication, it was never accepted by the city; that it was never opened or used as a street; that appellee never dedicated any part of it as a street, and can find no record of evidence of any such dedication by any previous owner. In short, the bill denies the city's claim that the property in dispute is a public street."
No preliminary injunction issued upon or after the filing of the bill, and the city of Mobile installed the sewer and continues to use the same. On the hearing, by amendment of the bill these subsequent occurrences were alleged, and appropriate prayer was added, for a mandatory injunction compelling the removal of the sewer. The cause was tried upon the pleadings and an agreed statement of facts. There were certain objections to the legal sufficiency of portions of the agreed statement of facts.
The city's answer makes a part thereof certain proceedings had, in 1851, in the chancery court of Mobile, in suit No. 1694, for the partition of real properties among joint owners. The reporter will set out in his statement of facts the certified map of the commissioners (in said partition suit No. *198 1694), Cleveland, Monroe, and Gale, of date March 18, 1861, Exhibit No. 1, appearing on the records of the chancery court, in Record Book R, pp. 810, 809, 807, of the lower division of the Bernoudy tract; and Exhibit No. 2, the map of ward book of the city, drawn by Lewis Troost as city engineer, purporting to embrace the lands in said city bounded on the east by Water street and traversed by Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania streets from said Water Street East to the Mobile river. Said answer avers that there was a "general recognition of and the sale of lots of land by the parties to the partition suit in this [chancery] court numbered upon the docket thereof as 1694, by reference to the map filed by the aforesaid commissioners appointed in said partition suit, in this court on the 18th day of March, 1861, and recorded in this court in Book of Records R, pp. 806-810"; that the complainant "has bought and sold land in the city or Mobile, referring directly to the map of record in this court in Record Book R, pp. 807-810, and that such transactions upon the part of the complainant made an irrevocable dedication of said Virginia street from Old Water street to the channel of Mobile river, as shown upon the map made by the aforesaid commissioners, Monroe, Cleveland, and Gale, in the year 1852, and made a part of partition proceedings in cause 1694 of the records of this court." The city's answer admitted that the complainant owner the land described in the bill, "with the exception of a 50-foot street known as Virginia street, running near the northern boundary line of the land of said complainant from Old Water street to the Mobile river, as fully appears upon maps attached to this answer as Exhibits Nos. 1 and 2, and made a part of this answer." That exception is further described as follows:
The "northern edge of Virginia street projected east from Old Water street to the Mobile river would pass through the said premises and include a strip 50 feet wide, extending east and west entirely through the north side of the said premises, and so close to the north line as to leave thereof a strip of about 1 foot and 1 inch in width to the north side of the street."
The action of the city in contracting for the laying of the large sewer along and under Virginia street eastward to Mobile river is averred to be "lawful and proper," from the facts stated tending to show that the absolute ownership of the lands in question was in the city of Mobile as a dedicated street in that city from a distance west of Water street and extending east of Water street to the channel of Mobile river. It is further averred that the construction of said sewer was not an invasion of complainant's property right in the land along which the sewer would be laid to its discharge in said river.
The complainant must establish the material allegations of her bill; one, among others, being that she is the owner of said tract of land on which the sewer was constructed, and that the maintenance of the sewer would constitute a permanent appropriation of, and a continuing trespass to her said lands, resulting in an irreparable injury to complainant.
It will be observed that the city seeks no affirmative relief; that the burden remains on the complainant to prove the material allegations of her bill. Robinson v. Griffin,
Complainant's ultimate source of title was the decree of partition of lands in Mobile county among joint owners, in chancery suit No. 1694, wherein Brewer Bell et al. were complainants and Smith et al. were respondents. The suit was instituted on September 20, 1851. The decree for partition and the appointment of commissioners (E. B. Gale, D. W. Goodman, W. T. Cleveland, and H. Monroe) was entered on January 7, 1852; the subsequent report of these commissioners, of the partition, was made about April 12th, and the several allotments to the owners, of *199
their respective tracts, were confirmed by the decree of April 16, 1852. Thus were the titles of the respective parties, to their several allotments, vested by the decree of confirmation (Pettit v. Gibson,
The allotment made by said commissioners to H. O. Brewer and Isaac Bell, Jr., together with the decree of confirmation, employs incomplete description as showing the locations and dimensions of streets. For example the allotment to Bell Brewer was "one-half of the whole tract, to wit, the south half of the said tract extending eastwardly from Conception street to the channel of Mobile river, squares numbers 267, 268, 269, and 270, lying between Virginia and Maryland streets and Conception and Cedar streets. Squares numbers 247, 248, 249, 250, 251, 252, and 253, lying between Maryland and Pennsylvania streets, and Franklin and Scott streets. Also squares numbers 274 and 297 situate between Scott and Wilkinson streets and south of Maryland street. Also squares 294, 277, and 244, situate between Broad and Jefferson streets, and south of Pennsylvania street. Also the east half of squares 293, 278, and 243, situate between Broad and Marine streets, and south of Pennsylvania street. Also squares 292, 279, 242, 241, 280, and 291, situate between Murphy and Marine streets and south of Pennsylvania street. All of said lands are colored on said map dove color, and the names of Bell Brewer marked thereon." The allotment to "Isaac Bell, Jr., and L. Gibbons," who owned one-half of one-twentieth of said tract, was as follows:
"A strip of land extending from Conception street to the channel of the river, adjoining on the north the lands of Bell Brewer, and marked red on said map and having a frontage of about twenty-one feet."
And that to Robert W. Smith, who owned one-half of one-twentieth, was as follows:
"A strip of land extending from Conception street to the channel of Mobile river, adjoining Bell Gibbons on the north and containing a frontage of about twenty-one feet. * * * Also one-eighth of square 243 adjoining the lands of Bell and Gibbons on the east and colored on said map blue" — and Robert W. Smith's allotment also referring to said map.
Without the map referred to and made a part of the partition proceeding and decree therein, the streets that traverse these lands cannot be located, nor can the relative positions of the several squares be determined. That is, the decree and the map are interdependent. The term "squares" is generally used synonymously with "blocks" in describing urban premises. A square or block means a subdivision of a city or town inclosed by streets, whether occupied by building or inclosures or merely comprising vacant lots. Frazer v. Ott,
In the deed from Bell and Brewer, of date February 5, 1880, to John Lawrence Lavretta, complainant's ancester and predecessor in title, certain lands were described, to wit:
"The south half of all that portion of the southern division of the Bernoudy tract which lies east of Conception street and extends eastwardly to the channel of Mobile river" (except the designated tracts of lots).
This deed also purports to convey the designated lots in "squares west of Conception street," in square 267, and also lots No. 268, 250, 297, 278, 279, 242, 280, 241, and concludes with the general recital:
"All the above according to the numbers, dimensions and locations of streets as shown by the printed sales map of Bell and Brewer on record in probate court of Mobile county, said map being in conformity to the decree and partition in chancery court Record Book R, pages 806, 807, 808, 809, and 810."
Thus was established the identity of the map referred to as in the probate court with that in the chancery court, which identity *200 was acknowledged by complainant's immediate predecessor in title. That is to say, the two maps were one and the same. By this reference, complainant's ancestor recognized the correctness of the two maps, and by adoption authenticated (as to his lands) said map finding expression in the chancery court Record Book R, pp. 806-810. On said map or maps Virginia street is indicated as open from Conception street eastwardly to the channel of Mobile river.
For the purpose of interpreting the conveyance, to ascertain the intention of the parties to the deed to said Lavretta, as to the existence, locations, dimensions, and extent of the streets, lots, and blocks indicated thereon, the map referred to in the decree and in the deed became a part of complainant's title. It has long been declared to be the law that where a map is referred to in a grant or deed as indicating what is intended to be conveyed, it is to be regarded as a part of the conveyance, and may be referred to for the purpose of aiding in the identification of the land showing its form, location, etc. Doe ex Dem. Miller v. Cullum,
"Plaintiff had purchased the entire tract, well described in his deed except the part previously conveyed by his grantor to Nixon, and since the plaintiff in ejectment must recover on the strength of his own title, and not the weakness of his adversary's, it was incumbent on plaintiff here to delimit the exception." Southern Iron Steel Co. v. Stowers,
Of necessity, the same rule must obtain where the description in a conveyance referred to a map or plat with streets or roads indicated thereon as dedicated to the public. The party claiming such a street under such a conveyance must "delimit the exception." Therefore (applying the rule), under the averments of her bill in the case at bar, the complainant must show that the street in question was not dedicated and accepted as indicated on said map. The agreed statement of fact contains the admission that several early conveyances were made of lots lying in the subdivision in question; that "the said map appearing as aforesaid on pages 807, 809, and 810 of said Record Book R of the chancery court of Mobile county, Ala., has been generally or many times referred to as the map of the southern division of the Bernoudy tract, by various owners, in conveying by deed portions of said tract."
In the family settlement between the heirs at law or next of kin of John Lawrence Lavretta (Betts v. Ward,
"Also an undivided one-half interest in that strip of land known as the Bell and Gibbons tract which strip extends from the east side of Conception street to the channel of Mobile river, it being the identical strip of land forty feet wide, more or less, which was set apart and allotted to Bell and Gibbons by the chancery court, the decree and map showing correctly the dimensions of said strip, and its exact location recorded in Book R, by the records of the said chancery court at Mobile, and said map being of and relating to the southern division of the Bernoudy tract. Said strip is also shown in the records of the probate court in the printed sales book of Bell and Brewer."
In the deed from C. Lawrence Lavretta and wife to his sisters, the complainant and Philomena, lots in designated squares in the southern division of the Bernoudy tract were conveyed; and certain of the property is therein described as being of the "southern division of the Bernoudy tract, being a part of the property conveyed by Bell and Brewer to John Lawrence Lavretta by deed found on record in Deed Book 42 N. S., pages 150-51, etc. All of the above-described property as to numbers, location and description, are according to the sales map of Bell and Brewer, of record in the probate court, and said map being according to a decree or petition [meaning the partition had] in the chancery court, to be found in Book R, of the records of said court, pp. 806, 807, 808, 809, and 810." When the Lavretta deeds are considered together, the purpose is shown to effectuate a division of the lands theretofore purchased by their father from Bell and Brewer; and for the purposes of this case the two deeds must be construed as one instrument. When the recitals contained in the deed of Bell and Brewer to John Lawrence Lavretta, and the recitals in the subsequent deeds of the Lavrettas to each other, are so considered, and aided, as they must be, by the map recorded in the chancery court (in Record Book R, from pages 806 to 810), the setting apart and platting of the tract in question into urban subdivisions — streets, alleys, blocks, lots, etc. — by its said several owners, as so delineated on said map, must be held to have been intended and consummated in the adoption of the map by references. The fact that the apparent authority for the record of the *201
map is not disclosed does not destroy the binding and controlling force of said references to said drawing; and they must be held to operate an estoppel in pais against said party so recognizing the platting and dedication, and their successors in title. Sherer v. City of Jasper,
As confirmatory of the early adoption of said map, we may observe that it found place in the records of the chancery court more than 50 years ago; and it has been many times referred to as the map of the southern division of the Bernoudy tract, in deeds to parcels of the land embraced therein. The agreed statement of facts admits that Bell and Brewer conveyed one of the lots of the lands so acquired by their purchase at the partition proceeding, to one Delphine Moog, on January 26, 1880 (before complainant's ancestor purchased the lot in question); that in the Moog deed the lots were described as being in the southern division of the Bernoudy tract according to the map of Bell and Brewer recorded in the probate court of Mobile county, and further described as a square bounded on the north by Virginia street, etc.; that Lyman Gibbons and wife, on March 6, 1863, conveyed to one Kelly an undivided one-half interest in a strip of land running east of Conception street to the channel of Mobile river, known as the strip marked "Bell and Gibbons" on the map of the southern division of the Bernoudy tract, made by Louis Troost, city surveyor, and recorded in Book R, 806, 809, and 810 of the Chancery Court, in Mobile County; that Chas. H. Froude and wife executed to King a deed of date March 4, 1871, conveying land according to "a plan of southern division of Bernoudy tract made by Louis Troost and recorded in Book R, Chancery Records, Mobile County."
It is also averred in the answer, and shown by the agreed statement of facts, that N.H. Brown and others, being the heirs at law of Archibald Brown, who was one of the parties complainant in the aforesaid cause No. 1694, executed to one George C. Forbes a deed to certain of the properties "situate in the southern division of the Registe Bernoudy tract in the city of Mobile," and more specifically described as "being the same land set apart and allotted to Archibald Brown, in the decree of the chancery court of Mobile county, rendered January 7, 1852, and of record in Book D, pages 515, 516, 517, 518, and 519, and in the same book at pages 602, 603, 604, 605, and 606, of said chancery court, and for the survey and map of said lands as returned by the commissioners appointed by said court, see book of chancery records of the said chancery court, Book R, pages 806, 807, 809, 810, 811, and 812."
Thus it is shown that the intent on the part of the former owners preceding the Lavrettas, as to the strip of land in question, was to dedicate to the public, as streets in the city of Mobile, to the channel of the river, the lands indicated as streets on and by the maps and as set out in the chancery record Book R, p. 806 et seq. The public, as well as individuals, had a right to rely, and did rely, on this conduct of such former owners, so clearly indicative of their intent to dedicate. 4 McQuillin, Mun. Corp. § 1561; 1 Elliott on Roads
Streets (3d Ed.) §§ 138-140; East Birmingham Co. v. B. M. F. Co.,
The sale and purchase of lots with reference to the plat in question was a sufficient dedication and acceptance of the streets as indicated on the plat (Smith v. Opelika,
In London San Francisco Bank v. City of Oakland, 90 Fed. 691, 33 C.C.A. 237, the Circuit Court of the United States held that a map or plat of a city, signed and acknowledged by the owners of the land, and duly recorded, and by reference to which such owners partitioned the property by deeds between themselves, constitutes a dedication to the public of the streets shown thereon, and that it is immaterial by whom or for what purpose the map was originally made; that an intention to dedicate must be shown, yet it need not be proven by positive testimony, but is determinable by the peculiar facts and circumstances of the case, and may be inferred therefrom; that it is "more readily *202
inferred in the case of a street in a town or city than a country road"; that acceptance of dedication may be by act of the municipality, declaring certain named streets on a designated plat as "public streets," or by user by the public of a portion of the street dedicated as such by the owner of the land — the acceptance in the latter case being of the entire street, though its full use be deferred until necessity therefor shall arise. Barclay v. Howell, 6 Pet. 498, 506,
It is not controverted that Virginia street has long been open, improved, used, and maintained by the city of Mobile, and by the public so used, to Conception street and in fact to Water street. And just here it may be observed that there are ancient evidences of the dedication and acceptance of Virginia street, east of Water street; the official map of the city in 1837 shows that street to have extended a block and a half east of Water street; the Troost map (1844) shows Virginia street as extending to the river, and likewise does the Pillans map (1868).
As we have already observed, a large section of Virginia street was open, improved, and used as a public street by the city and by the public, as that street was delineated in the chancery map in question. Of course, therefore, all ordinances thereafter enacted by the city governing body, affecting public streets generally, had application to Virginia street, as it was in fact dedicated by said former owner, to the channel of Mobile river, notwithstanding the fact that said street was not in fact open east of Water street. See extract from Code of Ordinances, City of Mobile 1897, pp. 407-415, set out in answer of the city of Mobile in the instant case.
We are not of the opinion that the agreed statement of fact contained an admission, on the part of the city, of complainant's absolute ownership of the lands in question. No fair interpretation of that statement can be given that effect. It is recited therein that:
"Complainant owned and for many years has owned that part of the south two-thirds of the south half of the southern division of the Bernoudy tract which lies east of Water street, and the above-described 50-foot strip of land is situated just within the subdivision just described, the north line of said 50-foot strip being 13 inches south of the north line of the said south two-thirds of the south half of the southern division of the Bernoudy tract. The south line of said tract is some 245 feet south of the south line of said 50-foot strip"
— yet these words are immediately followed by the qualifying statement:
"If said 50-foot strip east of Water street is a public street, then complainant's title to that portion of the property is subject to, and incumbered by, all of the easements, rights, and privileges which the public and municipality have in public streets, but if said strip is not a public street, then complainant's title to all of said property is absolute and unincumbered."
Thus the agreed statement of facts presented the question, without the embarrassment of admissions, as contended for by appellants: Whether or not complainant owned said lots free of any easements, rights or privileges which the public and the city of Mobile had in Virginia street to the channel of Mobile river. After a careful consideration of this record, we are of the opinion that complainant's title is not absolute and unincumbered to the land in question, as found by the lower court, but that said tract or strip of land is subject to the paramount right of the city of Mobile to use it, as one of the city's public highways, to the channel of the Mobile river. See general authorities on the question of the paramount right of a municipality to the use of its streets for reasonable municipal purposes, under the police powers of government, collected in City of Birmingham v. Graves,
The decree of the circuit court of Mobile is reversed, and judgment is here rendered for the city of Mobile, and dismissing, at her cost, the bill of complainant, Delena L. L. Chapman.
Reversed and rendered.
ANDERSON, C. J., and MAYFIELD and SOMERVILLE, JJ., concur.