88 Md. 427 | Md. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case there are four appeals in one record from the Baltimore City Court, all of which depend upon the determination of a single question, and that question is whether the bed of Chase street lying between Patterson Park avenue and Mine Bank lane had been dedicated by the owners thereof as a public highway before the commencement of condemnation proceedings for the opening of Chase street, between Patterson Park avenue and Grove alley. This question was raised in the Court below by a prayer offered by the Mayor and City Council that such dedication had been made 8y a certain deed offered in evidence and mentioned in the prayer, which prayer was rejected, so that the correctness of the ruling in the rejection of that prayer is the only matter before this Court on these appeals.
George J. Appold and Samuel Appold being on the 6th of November, 1867, the owners in fee of a tract of land in Baltimore City, containing sixty-six acres, on that day sold and conveyed to the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore part of said tract, containing twenty-four acres, in trust for a site for the McDonogh Institute. The language of the grant was in the usual form of trust deeds and the tract conveyed was described as follows: “All that tract or parcel of land situate and lying in the City of Baltimore aforesaid, and described as follows, that is to say: Beginning for the same at the point or place where a line drawn along the centre of Chase Street will intersect a line drawn along the centre of Castle Alley: thence bounding easterly on the centre of Chase Street 1901 feet and 6 inches to the west side of Mine Bank Lane: thence northerly on the
“ The defendant prays the Court to instruct the jury that the lots of ground lying in the bed of Chase street, between the east side of Patterson Park avenue and the west side of Mine Bank lane, and for the taking of which by the City the appellants in the cases now on
It appears from the bill of exceptions that there was no mention of Chase street or Castle alley in the deed from Murray to the Appolds, but that the sixty-six acres thereby conveyed, in fact embraced all the land in the bed of Chase street, between Patterson Park avenue and Mine Bank lane, and all the land northwardly and southwardly from Chase street for a long distance in either direction, both Chase street and Castle alley being within the lines of the tract as described in the deed from Murray; also that Chase street, Castle alley and Mine Bank lane were among the streets laid down on Poppleton’s plat, made prior to 1817, and that the ordinance providing for condemning and opening Chase street from Patterson Park avenue to Grove alley was approved May 3rd, 1893. The law governing the dedication of land as a public highway has been very frequently before this Court, and its general principles are definitely and firmly established. In every case, an intent on the part of the owner to dedicate his land to the particular use alleged is absolutely essential; and unless such intention is clearly proved by the facts and circumstances of the particular case no dedication exists. Dedication will be presumed where the facts and circumstances clearly warrant it; or it may be rebutted and altogether prevented from arising by circumstances incompatible with the supposition that any dedication was intended. We quote from the cases of McCormick v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, 45 Md. 524, and Glenn v. Same, 67 Md. 390. In the present case the appellant’s counsel frankly admits in his brief that “ The single question involved is, whether the Appolds, by the
The whole doctrine of dedication to use as a public highway as developed in the decisions in this State rests upon implied covenant to an easement in the highway, and there can be no presumption of dedication where this foundation is wanting. The essential elements or conditions of such a dedication are as follows: ist a street designated on a plat made or adopted by the party himself as passing over his lands. 2nd. A subsequent conveyance by him, of lots binding on such street, and 3rd, the retention at the time of the conveyance by the owner of the fee in the bed of the street. We have found no case of dedication of a street in our Reports where any one of these elements is absent, and we believe none can be found, because in the language of the appellees’ brief the grant of any part of the street lying alongside of the lot conveyed “ is destructive of the foundation on which, under the decisions of this Court rests the inference of an intent to dedicate a street from the grant of land not embraced within the lines of the street.”
The Appolds in their deed to the Mayor and City Council, Trustee, conveyed to it, as one parcel, each and every part of the land therein described, and the conveyance was of the fee. If the interest or estate taken by the grantee in that part of the land north of the north line of Chase street was a fee, it follows that the interest or estate taken in that part of the land south of the north line of Chase street was equally a fee. The expressed intent to vest in the grantee a fee in that part of the bed of the street between the north line and the centre of
If any dedication could be made by that deed, it must be of Chase street as delineated on the plat alongside of the lot binding on the street; that is of the whole of Chase street as thus delineated, and not of the half or any part less than the whole alongside of said lot. This deed speaking as it does, uno ñatu, cannot operate both as a grant of the northern half of Chase street in fee, and as a dedication of the southern half of the same street as a public highway. It follows from what we have said that there has been no dedication of the bed of Chase street between Patterson Park avenue and Mine Bank lane and that there was no error in refusing the prayer asserting that such dedication had been made.
We shall therefore affirm the judgment of the Baltimore City Court.
Judgment affirmed with costs above and below.