8 Mo. App. 416 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the court.
In this case no instructions were asked or exceptions to the admission of evidence taken, and the only point preserved is, that in the motion for new trial it is assigned as error that the judgment was against the law and the evidence, and should have been for the defendant. The presumption is in favor of the judgment, and it must stand unless it affirmatively appears that the judgment cannot upon any ground be justified. The action is trespass to real property, and involves the title to a strip of ground in city block of the city of St. Louis No. 1039, which strip, before the suit was commenced, was occupied by the plaintiff, and which the defendant claims is a part of the street called Page Avenue. The plaintiff projected a building, a part of which was to be upon this strip, and was proceeding to erect the house when the defendant, under city ordinance No. 10,749, providing for the removal of obstructions from the streets, interfered, and the present action was brought. It is not disputed but that the plat and dedication of the commissioners, filed in the recorder’s office of St. Louis County, on July 3, 1854, of this subdivision of section 16, township 45, of range 7 east, dedicating to public use certain streets named on the plat, which plat is referred to in plaintiff’s deeds, was sufficient to vest the title to Page Avenue in the city. It is the location of' Page Avenue that is disputed. It seems that by measurement on the ground the distance between the eastern and western boundary line of this subdivision, as shown by the plat, is short about three feet and ten inches, which distance corresponds to the strip in dispute. The argument from the plat necessarily leaves the proper location of Page Avenue
Possibly the court may have found in favor of the plaintiff upon the Statute of Limitations. It is urged that the testimony does not establish adverse possession as against the city, as the plaintiff did not claim to own to the fence. But that is not the question, as the fence was further west than the west line claimed by the plaintiff. The testimony of the son of the plaintiff certainly tends to show adversé possession on the part of the plaintiff and his grantors of the land in dispute, and that for more than
The judgment is affirmed.