1 N.W.2d 373 | Minn. | 1941
Plaintiff acquired the premises in 1938 and shortly thereafter erected a building adjacent to a 10-foot strip of land which had for many years served as an alleyway across to the next street. Defendant owns the adjoining property, and it is to his use of the driveway that plaintiff objects and here seeks to prevent. The controlling question is whether the following finding of fact, taken verbatim from the stipulation, is a sufficient basis for the decision that there had been a common-law dedication of this strip of land:
"For more than fifteen (15) years immediately prior to the construction of said building, said premises, and particularly the said strip of land so used as a driveway, has been openly, adversely, and continuously used by the defendant, his cotenants, predecessors in title, tenants, and by the public in general, as an alleyway or passageway with vehicles between Benson and Pacific avenues in the City of Willmar."
There is no disagreement between the parties over the applicable law. As early as Wilder v. City of St. Paul,
Plaintiff admits, as he must, that "acquiescence, without objection, in the public use for a long time, is such conduct as proves and indicates to the public an intention to dedicate." Klenk v. *375
Town of Walnut Lake,
We think that the above finding of fact afforded adequate basis for implications favorable to dedication. Controlling, of course, is the part of the finding which states that "for more than fifteen (15) years * * * the said strip of land * * * has been openly, adversely, and continuously used by the defendant * * * and by the public in general, as an alleyway." From the fact that for more than 15 years prior to the time of plaintiff's ownership the use had been "open," it may be inferred that the public had used the alleyway in a manner that was manifest, obvious, observable, and unmistakable. If the use was of this character for that length of time, it is reasonable to conclude either that it was known to the prior owner, which was a bank in Willmar, or, if not, the owner was negligent in not knowing and cannot be relieved from its ignorance. Klenk v. Town of Walnut Lake,
We do not deny that the stipulation reveals that for a three-year period the public used the entire premises as a parking lot, and that such use was referable to the lease held by the city and not to the dedication. However, that particular use was not long, and the determinative finding of fact clearly indicates that the alleyway existed for many years before and many years after the use under the lease. Proof of some particular period of public use is not a prerequisite to dedication (Case v. Favier,
So any desire by the plaintiff to exercise private dominion over that part of the premises used as an alleyway must yield to the greater right of the public acquired by long continuous and uninterrupted use. The fact that this use in its origin may have been "adverse" does not prevent or make inconsistent a later inference of acquiescence which arises by virtue of continuous public use with the owner's knowledge. Nor is the fact that the public officials have made no repairs of this alleyway of any consequence upon the question of dedication at common law. Carpenter *377
v. Gantzer,
Order affirmed.