12 Ga. 239 | Ga. | 1852
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
Indeed, it is perfectly obvious, that- if a dedication of streets and squares, in our cities, was liable to be recalled at the will of the original proprietor, the most destructive hindrance would be thrown in the way of their improvement, and the rankest injustice would be visited upon individuals. Upon slight observation, this doctrine will be discovered to rest in sound policy and essential justice.
I have stated that no particular form or ceremony is necessary to make a dedication. It may be created by parol and proven by parol. All that is required (say the Supreme Court of the United States, in Cincinnati vs. White’s Lessees,) is the assent of the owner of the land, and tbe fact of its being used for the
Chancellor Kent, canvassing this doctrine, says : “ The true principles on the subject, to be deduced from the authorities, I apprehend to be, that if there be no other evidence of a grant or
In support of these general views, the following authorities are referred to, some- of which have been already cited. Hammond's Law of Ni Si Prints, 193, edition of 1823. Lade vs. Shepherd, 2 Stra. 2004. Rex vs. Loyd, 1 Camp. 260. Rugby Charity vs. Meriwether, 11 East. 375. Jervis vs. Dean, 3 Bing. 447. Rex vs. Burr, 4 Camp. 16. Woodyer vs. Hadden, 5 Taunt. 125. The State vs. Wilkinson, 2 Vermont, 480. Cincinnati vs. White's lessees, 6 Peters, 431. Livingston vs. The Mayor of New York, 8 Wend. 85. Wyman vs. The Mayor, &c. of New York, 11 Wend. 486. The Trustees of Watertown vs. Cowen, 4 Paige, 510. Post vs. Pearsoll,22 Wend. 431. Pearsoll vs. Post, 20 Wend. 111. 7 Vermont R. 241. 17 Serg. and Rawl, 88. 3 Vermont, 521. Ibid, 530. 12 Wheat. 582. 2 Peters, 256. 9 Cranch, 292. 3 Vermont R. 521. 6 Idem, 355. 18 Louis. R. 286.
.• Without entering more minutely into the doctrine under review, the following propositions may, I think, be considered as established upon authority. That an urban square or common is the subject of dedication.
That a grant ié not necessary to create a public use, nor is it necessary that it be evidenced in writing, but that it may be created by parol and proven by parol. That the assent of the
1. Because the bill makes no proper case for the injunction sought.
2. Because the contract set up in said bill, was not in writing, and therefore void.
3. Because, by his own shewing, the complainant is not entitled to the relief sought. The second of these is denied, as I have labored to show, by an irresistible weight of authority. This settled, the other two grounds, (being in fact but one) amount to nothing. Upon the case made, the plaintiff is entitled to relief, and to relief by injection. The argument assumed that the bill and also the proof, made a case of dedication to King and other individuals, who at the sale bought property contiguous to the vacant lot. From this assumption sprang (as it seems to me,) all the erroneous conclusions to which the learned counsel came. If this were true, then I concede that
Nor is it necessary that he should have become the purchaser before or at the time when the dedication is made. When made, it is for the benefit of all who are or may become citizens. It is an appropriation for public use forever, and all who at any time become members of that public, are its beneficiaries, and have rights in the use, which the law will protect. As to damage, the law presumes damage, when a right of this sort is violated in this way. A private licence will be enforced in Equity by injunction. 3 Paige, 254. 3 Kent, 452. 2 Munf. R. 488. 4 Sandf. Ch. R. 502. If a license in an individual, why not a use in the public ? The principle is the same in either case.
In Barclay et al vs. Howell’s Lessees, the Supreme Court hold that if there is a dedication by an original proprietor in favor of a City, and the authorities of the City" have appropriated it to a different purpose, Equity may compel the specific execution of the trust, by restraining the corporation, or by removing the obstructions. 6 Peters, 507. If in that case, much more will Equity interfere if the proprietor, as in this case, seeks to revoke the dedication, by selling the property.
It is claimed in the assignment, that the Court erred in charging the Jury, “.that if ihe City received the price bid for said lot, (the lot bought by Mr. King,) and made him a deed, this ratified the sayings of the auctioneer, and dedicated said reserved-ground to the public.” This assignment does not truly represent the Court. What the Judge charged was, “ that if at the time of the sale of the lots adjacent to those in question, the Mayor and a portion of the City Council, while engaged in the sale, in order to enhance the price of the other lots, caused proclamation to be made to the bidders that these lots were not to be sold, but were to be kept open as a perpetual reserve or common, and the lots were sold in that neighborhood, with this understanding on the part of the bidders, and if the Mayor and Council then went on to complete the sales by the execution of deeds' and the reception of the purchase money, and forbore to sell the lots in dispute, but permitted them to remain open and unoccupied, except as a common; these facts are, in the opinion of the Court, a dedication to public use. The assignment represents the Court as holding, that if the City received the price of Mr. King’s lot, and gave him a deed, that thereby, they ratified the sayings of the auctioneer, and that by this ratification they made the declaration ; when in truth, the charge was, that if the Mayor and a portion of the Council, at the sale, and while engaged in it, in order to enhance the price of lots, caused proclamation to be made that the reserved lots were not to be sold, butweretobekeptopenasa perpetual reserve; and if they were
The ratification then, was in law, a dedication, at the time when the agents of the Council made the reservation. To this effect the Court instructed the Jury. If it was, it was competent to prove it, by a certified extract from their minutes. Again, beyond all question, the proceedings of the Council, on the petition of Hines, was a solemn dedication of this ground, at
Let the judgment be affirmed.