101 Mo. App. 624 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903
The object of this litigation is to restrain the appellants from opening an alley twelve feet wide through the residence premises of the respondents in the city of Mexico, Missouri, pursuant to ah order of the city council entered December 2, 1893. Despondent ’s home stands at the northwest comer of Cole and Anderson streets in said city on a lot extending back from Anderson street along the west side of Cole twelve feet north of the center of the block. The block is part of an addition to the city known as the ‘ ‘ County Addition” which was platted in 1855. In 1856 Audrain county conveyed the streets and alleys contained in said addition to the city of Mexico for public use, and the strip of ground in question appears to have been included in the dedication but was never opened or used by the public, as the open part of the alley stopped at the west line of respondent’s premises. Eespondent’s ancestor built a barn, buggy shed, wood and coal house and other valuable improvements on the premises about
Respondents found their case on a claim of title to the disputed strip acquired by adverse possession, which appellants meet with the defense that adverse possession prior to 1866 was not proven, and that the title to land appropriated to public use can not be acquired by a possession which began since said year. R. S. 1899, see. 4270; Railroad v. Lottman, 149 Mo. 657. It is not denied that the city intended to remove respondents ’ improvements and had taken steps to that end; but the point made for reversal is that the judgment was against the weight of the evidence. The evidence well supports the finding that the premises now owned and occupied by the respondents were inclosed and adversely held by former owners and occupants, under whom the respondents claim, before the civil war. Some of the fencing was then burned by soldiers, but posts and planks sufficient to mark the line of the fence remained and the inclosure was restored by a later tenant. In 1875 the city of Mexico requested one owner, Doctor Macfarlane, to recognize its right to the strip, but he refused to do so and asserted title in himself. The city took no measures at that time nor until years after valuable buildings were erected on'the land in good faith, to assert its title and was rightly enjoined.
The language of the decree is too broad, as it restrains the city forever from entering on the controverted ground, though it might condemn the land or establish title to it by an ejectment action in which respondents’ would recover the value of their improvements. The adverse possession on which the respondents succeeded is of legal, not equitable cognizance; so a judgment on it in ejectment would be no bar to an
The judgment is modified by striking out the word “forever,” and affirmed.