This is a proceeding to take land for a post office in Lawrence. The Essex Company once owned the land, and has never conveyed it by deed. The city of Lаwrence has filed an intervening petition, which sets out:
“First. That said land was by the former owner thereof dedicated to the inhabitants of the said city of Lawrence for use аs a public park; that said dedication was accepted, and said land has been so used and enjoyed by the public under said dedication for a period of fоrty years and upwards; and that the city of Lawrence is now the owner in fee of said land. Second. That said land has been used by the public as a public park, and also аs a means of access by paths across the same, adversely, continuously, and uninterruptedly, for a period of more than twenty years, and that the city of Lawrence has acquired title to said land by prescription, or at least has acquired a prescriptive right of, way across said land.”
For the purposes of the casе, it is assumed that the evidence would show an uninterrupted public user for more than 20 years, and would also show the designation of the land as a park upon plans made more than 20 years ago by the Essex Company. There was no other positive act by the company, and no formal act by the city government.
This land is condemned, not by virtue of any paramount authority of the United States, but by virtue of authority delegated to the United States by the commonwealth of Massachusetts. Const. U. S. art. 1, § 8; Rev. Laws Mass. c. 1, § 7; Burt v. Insurance Co.,
That a town may acquire a right of way by prescription was decided in Deerfield v. Railroad,
But in some cases a municipality is permitted to maintain suit by virtue of its interest and of thе interest of its inhabitants in property held for the public benefit. In Inhabitants of Springfield v. Connecticut River R. Co.,
We come next to the application of these principles to the facts оf this case. There is here no express provision of statute. I do not believe that the United States could, at its will, build this post office in the middle of the principal street оf Lawrence, or across the main line of an important railroad. I do not think that the right of the public to prevent the .first-mentioned taking can be vindicated only by the attоrney general. I doubt if it can be laid down, without qualification, that the public use of a post office is in all places superior to the public use of a park. That it is sо in the case at bar appears probable from what appeared incidentally at the argument, but the issue was not then raised, and cannot be determined without further hearing, if the city desires to be heard.
