17 Minn. 260 | Minn. | 1871
By the Court.
The complaint alleged that, in August, 1855, the proprietors of certain lands caused the same to be duly surveyed and plotted as the town of Minneapolis; that the plot was made, certified, acknowledged and recorded in compliance with chap. 31, Rev. St.; that block No. 62, in
The claim of the county to the block in question is based upon section 5, ch. 31, Rev. St., which reads in this wise: “ When the plot or map shall have been made out and certified, acknowledged and recorded, as required by this chapter, eveiy donation or grant to the public, or any individual or individuals, religious society or societies, or to any corporation or body politic, marked or noted as such on said plot or map, shall be
The question presented oy the demurrer to the original. complaint is whether the words, “ county block,” written upon block 62 upon the plot, evidence a donation or grant of said block to the county of Hennepin under the provisions of the statute.
We think this question must be answered in the negative. The “ donation or grant to the public or any individual, * * * or to any corporation or body politic, must be marked or noted as such,” on said plot. That is to say, to sustain the plaintiff’s claim in this case, the donation or grant must be marked or noted on the plot as a donation or grant of block 62 to the county of Hennepin.
The words “ county block,” upon which alone the plaintiff relies in the original complaint, do not of themselves, as written upon the plot, include the idea of a donation or grant. They might furnish ground for a conjecture that the proprietors had either given or granted the block to Hennepin county, or that they had reserved it with the design of giving it or selling it to the county at some future time. But there must be more than a ground for any conjecture, oven if it were not in the alternative. The donation or grant must be marked or noted as a donation or grant. There must be some marking or note
As to the amended complaint, we do not perceive how the “ writing ” incorporated therein can aid the plaintiff. If the “ writing ” is, as contended by plaintiff, mere surplusage, something not authorized by the statute and to which the statute giv s no effect; if it is not part of the plot, or, so far as this case is concerned, if it is not a marking or noting on the plot within the purview of the statute, we are unable to perceive how it can tend to establish a donation or grant of block 62 under the statute.
If, on the only supposable other hand, the writing, which is alleged to have been “ made, signed and sealed upon the face of the said plot ” before the recording thereof, and to have been “ duly acknowledged and recorded as a part of the plot,” is, (as would seem reasonable,) to be regarded as part of the plot, and as being a marking or noting or a setting forth or expression of the uses and purposes of a dedication under the statute, then certainly the writing would not tend to show that the block in controversy was given or granted to the county oj Hennepin.
As it appears to us, then, that both demurrers were properly sustained, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.