30 Colo. 163 | Colo. | 1902
(after the foregoing • statement) delivered the opinion of the court.
The respective contentions of the parties may thus be summarized: Both of them claim to be the owners in fee of this disputed strip. The plaintiffs maintain that when the city council vacated that portion of Depot Street contiguous to block 12, the title thereto reverted to the abutting lot owners; or.if Depot Street never was a public street, or was only a highway as to abutting lot owners, then in these abutting owners was vested the fee to the road, subject to any possible easement, to each one such portion of the vacated strip, or existing way,- as was immediately adjoining his lot. And since Case then owned, all of block 12, the legal title of the street, if vacated,. lying contiguous to that block reverted to him, or was, his, in any event, by virtue of his ownership of the, lots. So that when in 1878 Case conveyed to Ebert all of block .12 without any reservations in the deed, and although the street was then vacated, the grantee, took at least to the middle line of what was formerly Depot Street. Having connected themselves with Ebert’s title to lots 1, 2, and 3, plaintiffs, therefore, claim the ownership of that portion of the former street lying opposite the rear of their lots..
The defendants’ position is that, under the agreed facts, the deed of January 15,1878, from Case to Ebert describing all of block 12 in Case and Ebert’s Addition, by reference to the recorded plat and the subsequent deeds by which plaintiffs deraign title to lots 1, 2 and 3 limited the grant to the dimensions of the lots and block as exhibited by .the plat, and conveyed no part of the-premises in con
It may be stated as a general rule that a conveyance of a lot which borders upon a highway presumptively carries the title to the center of the street, if the grantor owns the land on which the highway is laid out (2 Devlin on Deeds, § 1024 and cases cited); and that one is presumed to convey the highest estate he owns in the lands granted unless a smaller estate is described. — City of Denver v. Clements, 3 Colo. 472. And the law in this jurisdiction (Olin v. D. & R. G. R. R. Co., 25 Colo., 177) is that upon a vacation by a city of a street, the title thereto reverts to the abutting lot owners, and not to the dedicator where such lots have been conveyed by the dedicator by unrestricted deeds of conveyance. Both parties- concede the last rule and both rely upon it.
When this plat was filed we had no statute declaring the force and effect of the making and recording of a plat of an addition to a city. — Mouat Lumber Co. v. Denver, 21 Colo., 1. There was, therefore, no statutory dedication of Depot Street. If there was a dedication at all, it was a common law dedication, but as the city neither expressly nor impliedly accepted it, there seems not to have been even a common law dedication, so far as the municipality is concerned. Under the doctrine of City of Denver
Much argument, pro and con, is devoted to the proposition that á deed describing property by lot and block number operates as a conveyance of contiguous property which was at one time, but is no longer, included within the limits of a public street. The plaintiffs rely chiefly upon Paine v. Consumers etc. Co., 71 Fed. Rep., 626, wherein Taft, circuit justice, in an elaborate opinion declares the rule is the same whether at the time of conveyance the street actually exists, or once was, but is no longer, a highway. The defendants to the contrary cite Harris v. Elliott, 10 Pet., 25; Sanchez v. Grace Church, 114 Cala., 295; Brown v. Taber, 103 Ia., 1; Chicago Lumber Co. v. Driving Park, 97 Ia., 25; Darrow v. Village of Homer, 122 Mich., 229. The decision here, however, does not require us to establish the rule for this jurisdiction, and for our present purpose we might well assume that plaintiffs are right in their contention. In 2 Devlin on Deeds, § 1024, the author says that unless the deed manifests an intention on the part of the grantor to limit the boundary line, the
In the statement of facts it appears that the ordinance of the city of Denver by which Depot Street was vacated was passed in the year 1874. This apparently is a mistake, for it was declared' by this court in Mouat Lumber Co. v. Denver, supra, where the same ordinance was before the court, that it was approved on the 4th of May, 1871, which the records of the city of Denver establish. But the exact date is not important in this case, for it is clear that there was on the records of Arapahoe county affecting the title to block 12 sufficient to show in 1878, when Case deeded block 12 to Ebert, that not only had Depot Street been lawfully vacated by the city council, but that both Case and Ebert, as the original owners of the addition, and Case, as the then owner of block 12, knew of the vacation by the city, and both of them by their acts intended to work a vacation of Depot Street as to abutting owners.
In determining the intention of the grantor and grantee with respect to the quantity or boundaries of land intended to be conveyed, resort may be had to the language of the description contained in the deed. 'If words are therein found clearly showing an intention to restrict its limits, that intention will prevail. That the original owner who has the fee both in the streets and lots abutting thereon has the right to retain his estate in the former when he sells the lat
In Paine v. Consumers Co., supra, so strongly relied upon by the plaintiffs, the court in ascertaining the intention of the parties observed that in the deed no mention was made of land in Water Street (that being the street in question) although if that was to be treated as another and' distinct lot it contained as much as a half a dozen platted lots. Obviously, if in that deed, under which the grantee claimed that his line was carried to the center of the street, mention had been made of Water Street as a distinct and separate lot from the lots conveyed as appurtenant to which the soil of the street to the center was claimed, the grant would have been restricted to the side or edge of the street nearest to those lots, and' not extended to its center.
Let us then carefully look to the language of the description in the deed of March 17,1871, from Ebert to Case. Ebert then owned all of block 12 and all of Depot Street opposite the same. The deed reads: “All block numbered twelve (12) in Case and Ebert’s Addition to the City of Denver; also doth quitclaim all title in being and reversion, to the land now occupied by Depot Street # * lying contiguous to and adjoining said block.” Clearly, then, Ebert treated block 12 and Depot Street as separate and distinct tracts and by the conveyance of block 12 did not intend to extend the grant so as to include any part of the adjacent street. For, after conveying the block by reference to its number as shown on the recorded plat, he quitclaims all title to the “land now occupied by Depot Street # # lying contiguous to and adjoining said block.” We must not disregard this additional description as surplusage; on the contrary
Bearing in mind, then, that when Ebert in 1871 conveyed to Case all of block 12 and, as a separate tract, his interest in the adjacent portion of Depot Street, the parties considered them as separate and distinct tracts of land, and that by conveying block 12 by its appropriate number and such portion of Depot Street as separate tracts Ebert intended to grant, and Case intended to receive, block 12 as ex
Case, then, in 1878, being the owner of all block 12 and also the title of Depot Street adjacent thereto certainly had the right to continue as separate the two titles and two tracts of ground which he held, just as Ebert did when title passed from him to Case. The parties concerned therefore, having severed the two estates, having by their deed in effect manifested their intention to vacate Depot Street and having limited block 12 to the' southeasterly side of that street, it was beyond the power of their subsequent grantees to reunite them in one tract, or to convey the street as appurtenant to the lots in the block, without the consent of all the parties concerned'. In other words, if Ebert, when he took title to block 12 in 1878. intended to receive by his grant from Case title thereto restricted to the southeasterly side of Depot Street, and such intention appears upon the face of the record, as we hold it does, with knowledge of which his grantees are charged, neither he nor they may now claim any portion of Depot Street as part of, or as appurtenant to, that block.
In his brief counsel for plaintiffs lays much
To this we reply: The presence of the “appurtenance clause” in this deed is no more significant than the absence thereof in the deed of Ebeit’s administrators to Gunther, plaintiffs ’ grantor, of these three lots. If its presence in the one case is conclusive that the street passed as an appurtenance, its absence in the other is equally conclusive that the grantee did not obtain title to the street as an appurtenance of the block. But when it is considered that at the time and for many years thereafter there was no decision of the supreme court of this state as to where the title of a vacated street went, — whether to the didicator, to the abutting land owners, or remained in the municipality, — and that in the deed from Ebert to Case the grantor merely quitclaimed Depot Street, the exercise of ordinary business prudence and sagacity on the part of Case sufficiently accounts for the erasures in the deed by which he merely transferred to Hendey and Meyer whatever title he had got from Ebert, without covenanting to warrant and defend the .same as an estate in fee simple.
Reversed.