165 Mo. 221 | Mo. | 1901
This is a bill in equity to enjoin the defendant from interfering with an easement- the plaintiffs claim in an alleged street, called Ferry street, in the town of Fenton, in St. Louis county. The defendant had judgment in the trial court and the plaintiffs appealed.
The facts are these. On the twenty-eighth of March, 1818, Antoine Soulard conveyed four hundred and eighty arpens, including the premises claimed to constitute Ferry street, and also all the land now owned by the plaintiffs and defendant, to William L. Long. On the twenty-first of March, 1827, -Long conveyed to Caleb Bowles one hundred and fifty-six arpens, of the four hundred and eighty arpens aforesaid. This conveyance also included the alleged Ferry street and all the property now owned by the plaintiffs and defendant. On the first of April, 1837, Long platted and laid out the town of Fenton. The plat showed a town of four blocks long and two blocks wide. Long divided the blocks into lots and also laid out and dedicated to public use streets. The streets running north and south he designated on the plat, Water street, Main street and Third street. Those running east and west he designated Ferry street, Mound street, Ward street and Grave street. This plat included a part of the land Long had sold ten years previously to Caleb Bowles, and also included the part of Ferry street shown on the plat lying between Main and Third streets, and also included the property owned by the plaintiffs. Prior to March 11, 1861, the heirs of Caleb Bowles sold all the property he had acquired from Long to John, and Samuel Vandover. On the sixth of March, 1883, the Vandovers sold fifty-nine acres of the one hundred and fifty-six arpens, including the alleged Ferry street and the property owned by the plaintiffs to Thomas F. Gately and Peter J. Welch. On the same day Gately and Welch sold to the plaintiffs’ ancestor, William Long-worth, a portion of the fifty-nine acres they acquired from the Vandovers, describing it as, “being the northeast comer lot of block number 7 of the town of Fenton, in St. Louis county, Mis
On the sixth of May, 1885, Gately conveyed, by deed of trust, all the fifty-nine acres, except the part sold to Stephen Bost, “and excepting a lot of fifty feet by one hundred and fifty feet in the northeast corner of block 7, town of Fenton, heretofore sold to Wm. Longworth,” to. Julius ILunicke, trustee for the Joseph Schneider Brewing Company. On the twentieth of October, 1887, ILunicke foreclosed the deed of trust and conveyed the property to the Schneider Brewing Company, the •deed reciting the same exceptions as to the land sold to Stephen Bost and the lot sold to William Longworth. On the fifteenth of November, 1888, the Joseph Schneider Brewing Company sold the land it acquired to Mathias Sedevie, and the deed contained the same exceptions as to the land sold to Bost and to Longworth. In none of these deeds is any mention made of Ferry street; but Main street, upon which plaintiffs’ property fronts, is mentioned, and in all of them the plaintiffs’ property is described as a lot fifty by one hundred and fifty feet in the northeast corner of block number 7, town of Fenton. There is no block number 7 in the town of Fenton, except as it was laid out on the plat of the town of Fenton, made and recorded by Wm. L. Long on April 1, 1837.
The town of Fenton was incorporated in 1871, and Gately and Longworth were members of the board of trustees for ten
The plat made by Long in 1837 complies with the statute, in form. It lacked dedicative force, however, as to Eerry street, because Long at that time did not own the land covered by Eerry street. He had sold that part of the original tract to Bowles ten years before the plat was made, acknowledged and recorded. So that as to Bowles, the attempted dedication of Eerry street by Long was a nullity. There was, therefore, no statutory dedication of Eerry street by Long. When Bowles’s heirs conveyed the property to the Vandovers, the same condition was true. And it was likewise true when the Vandovers conveyed the fifty-nine acres to Thomas E. Gately and Peter J. Welch on March 6, 1883. Neither was there any common-law dedication by deed or estoppel by reason of anything that was said or done by the owners up to the time Gately and Welch acquired the property. On the same day that Gately and Welch acquired the fifty-nine acres they sold to William Long-worth a part thereof, describing it as being “the northeast corner lot of block 7 of the town of Fenton,” etc. The subsequent conveyances by Welch to Gately, and by Gately to the trustee of the Schneider Brewing* Company, and by the trustee to the brewing company, and by the brewing company to defendant’s husband, all recite that they convey all of the fifty-nine acres except 8.76 acres sold to Stephen Bost, “and excepting a lot of fifty feet by one hundred and fifty feet in the northeast cornea’ of block 7, town of Fenton, heretofore sold to William
Eor these reasons the judgment of the circuit court dissolving the temporary injunction is reversed and judgment is entered here making5 the temporary injunction permanent.