44 So. 588 | Ala. | 1907
This bill is filed for tbe purpose of enjoining respondent from obstructing a public street, known as “Powell Street,” within the corporate limits of the complainant. The vital question in tbe case is whether or not tbe West End Land & Improvement Company, a corporation, in 1887, made an express common-law dedication to tbe public use of tbe land covered by tbe alleged street, as it runs from tbe Alabama Great Southern Bailroad track to tbe Tuscaloosa road. The bill alleges: That Avitbin tbe corporate limits of tbe complainant is a public highway known as “PoAvell
The contract by which it is claimed the dedication was made, it is insisted, was made by Powell with the West End Land & Improvement Company, acting and contracting through R. H. Pearson as its president. The only direct testimony for the complainant in respect to the making of the contract of dedication is that of C. B. Powell. It is to the effect- that the West End Land & Improvement Company owned a’ large tract of land on the north side of the railroad, and he owned 100 acres on the south side. Arthur Owen Wilson was employed by both of the parties to lay off their respective lands into town lots;'Powell’s-employment of him being first in point of time. At the time of the employment there was considerable activity in real estate in that district, and nearly all the civil engineers had more than they could do. It was agreed between Pearson and witness that the company’s land should be first laid off by Wilson, and in consideration of that agreement, the witness testified, “we were to have one street through my property to extend across the Alabama Great Southern Railroad to a connection with the Tuscaloosa road, which
An express common-law dedication of land to the public use as a highway may rest in parol, and the rights of the public are not dependent upon the use of the highway for any length of time, but arise and attach to the highway upon its acceptance by the public. — Elliott on Roads and Streets, § 121; Stewart v. Conley, 122 Ala. 179, 27 South. 303. But the burden of proving a dedication of lands to public use rests on the party who alleges it, and when it rests in parol the law requires that the evidence to establish it shall be clear, unequivocal, and satisfactory: — Forney v. Calhoun County, 84 Ala. 220, 4 South. 153; 9 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 52 (note 2). While tbis is a salutary rule, and exacts a high degree of proof, we are of the opinion that the preponderance of the evidence favors the insistence of the complainant that the contract of dedication was made. Powell’s testimony that an agreement was made is positive in its nature. He testified without qualification that Pearson, acting for the company as its president, made the agreement; while Mr. Pearson’s evidence is of a negative character. It clearly appears that be simply bases bis evidence that the contract was not made on his lack of recollection in respect to the matter. There is an old rule of evidence which requires that the evidence, where there is conflict, must be so reconciled, if it can be reasonably done, as to make all the witnesses speak
Tbis presents for consideration the insistence of the respondent that, conceding that Pearson made the agreement contended for, yet bis agreement was not binding on. the corporation. As we have seen, there is ample evidence tending to show that the street, as constructed by Powell, was used by the public, and that the people in the vicinity, before the complainant was organized as a municipal corporation, kept the street, and especially the bridges thereon, in repair; and the evidence without conflict shows that Mr. Pearson Avas president of, and a principal stockholder in, the company, Avhen the agreement to dedicate Avas made, and acted for the company. Under these circumstances, the authority of Pearson, as president of the corporation, may be inferred from silence and acquiescence in the public use. — Union Company v. Peckham, 16 R. I. 64, 12 Atl. 130. It is Avell settled that a dedication of land to public use. once made by the owner and accepted by the public, cannot be revoked so long as public use is maintained; so that the subsequent survey and plat by the company of the lot claimed to be a part of Powell street cannot revoke or annul the dedication to the public use. — 9 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 30 (note 3) ; Barclay v. Howell, 6 Pet. (U. S.) 498, 8 L. Ed. 477; Brown v. Manning, 6 Ohio, 298, 27 Am. Dec. 255; Union Company v. Peckham, 16 R. I. 64, 12 Atl. 130.
We are of tbe opinion that tbe decree of the chancellor is erroneous. It must therefore be reversed, and a decree will be here rendered granting tbe relief prayed.
Reversed and rendered.