15 Tex. 118 | Tex. | 1855
The controversy in this case is, whether a
The deeds to purchasers of the lots outside of, and on, the the streets so bounding the ground claimed as a common, are described by their numbers, the streets on which they front, the number of feet front and back, with a reference to the plat or map of Giddings’ property, recorded as aforesaid. Not one of them call for a front on the vacant piece or parcel of ground. The lot, or lots, of the plaintiff call for a front on the street, without any reference to the spot of ground, sought to be established as a public common; nor is there any evidence that it had been used as a common by the people, or claimed as such by the persons owning lots in its vicinity. It was in evidence, that appellee’s vendor, whilst owning the two lots now owned by his vendee, the plaintiff in the Court below, appellee in this Court, offered to purchase the vacant space as it is called, but his offer was not accepted by Giddings. The plat or map was recorded on the 16th of February, 1849, and the deed for the lots owned by the plaintiff, which he alleges are made less valuable by the erection of a house on the vacant lot, by the defendant, was made by Giddings on the first day -of March, 1849.
The evidence of the Surveyor shows that he found stakes set but covered with the sand, around this spot, at its different corners, and that they leave a space between (around) this ground claimed by the appellant, of about the width of a street. These are the material facts, appearing from the transcript of the record before us.
The question of what would amount to a dedication was very thoroughly examined by us in the case of Blair v. Odin, 3 Tex. R. 288 ; and after examining all the leading cases decided in the United States, we arrived at the following conclusion, that to sustain an action for the property didicated, the plaintiff must show a legal title ; or he must show the possession of the use and a deprivation thereof; and a suit brought to abate a nuisance by erecting a building thereon or obstructing the use, must be governed by the same rule of law.
The case of the city of Cincinnati v. White, 6 Peters, 431, was that of a dedication of a piece of ground between Front Street and the river to public use. The city showed no title in fee, but it had been long used as a common thoroughfare, on which thousands daily passed and repassed, and costly buildings were erected adjacent to it. The city sustained the dedication, on the ground mainly of possession of the use. In the case under consideration, there was no evidence of the ground haring been used-as a common, and nothing showing for what it was designed. And the fact that the deeds to the adjacent lots not referring to it as a common, repudiates the supposition that it was so intended ; and if permitted to hazard a conjee
Reversed and remanded.