87 W. Va. 277 | W. Va. | 1920
In the year 1903 the Point Pleasant Development Company purchased a tract of land lying north of the City of Point Pleasant, and east of the Baltimore & Ohio Eailroad tracks.
The first contention made by the defendant is that there was never any dedication of this particular strip of ground as an alley, it not being mentioned in the deed of dedication. We need hardly enter upon an inquiry in regard to this, in view of our conclusion upon the other points raised.
Assuming, without deciding, that this nineteen foot wide strip was offered by the land company to the public authorities as a public alley, that would not make it such. There would have to be not only an offer upon the part of the owner of the land, but an acceptance thereof by the municipal authorities. Hicks v. City of Bluefield, 86 W. Va. 367, 103 S. E. 323; Morlang v. City of Parkersburg, 84 W. Va. 508, 100 S. E. 394, 7 A. L. R. 717; and Miller v. Ciy of Bluefield, 87 W. Va. 220, 104 S. E. 547. This acceptance of the dedication may be by an order or resolution of the proper municipal authorities, or it may be by implication only. There is no effort in this case to show an acceptance in any other way than by implication. It is contended that by doing some work through its proper officers upon some of the streets laid out and improved by the land company, the town of Forth Point Pleasant accepted the dedication, and accepted every one of the streets and alleys in-
It is argued, however, that the act of the city authorities in asserting title to this alley just prior to the bringing of this suit was an acceptance of the dedication., and even though it had not been theretofore accepted that the action of the town at that time was an unequivocal declaration of its intention to accept the same. This might be true were it not for the fact that prior to this acceptance the offer made by the development company had been withdrawn. By making the new map in 1908, and including this strip of land in the deed made to Caldwell, the development company withdrew the offer theretofore made by it to dedicate the land as a public alley. There is no doubt about the right of one who thus offers to dedicate land to the public for street purposes to withdraw the offer
From what we have said, it is apparent that the decree complained of will be reversed, the injunction dissolved, and the bill, dismissed.
Reversed, injunction dissolved, bill dismissed.