82 Mo. 618 | Mo. | 1884
This suit was brought to restrain defendants perpetually from obstructing a street. Judgment was rendered for plaintiff according to the prayer of the petition, from which defendants have appealed to this court, and the questions presented by the appeal are, whether the strip of ground claimed as a street had been, dedicated by the owner, and if dedicated, whether the dedication had been accepted, and whether such dedication had been revoked before acceptance.
It appears from the evidence that in February, 1875, Mary S. Peery, Mary J. Bouton and Sarah A. Peery, who were the owners in fee of a tract adjacent, or near, to Kansas City, conveyed by deed to Robert J. Holmes a part of said tract, embracing said street, which was recorded in the recorder’s office of Jackson county on the 9th of April, 1875. Following the granting clause in this deed are the following words: “ We also grant, bargain and sell, convey and confirm, forty feet in width for the purpose of a street
The question as to whether the forty foot strip of ground, so far as it concerns the owners, was dedicated for a street, is dependent upon the fact whether such was the intention of the owners as “ the vital principle of dedication is the intention to dedicate, the animusdedicandi, and whenever this is unequivocal y manifested the dedication, so far as the owner of the soil is concerned, has been made. * * If accepted and used by the public in the manner intended,
Was this dedication accepted by the public? Upon this question the evidence is somewhat conflicting, some •witnesses testifying that it had not been generally used as a street; others testifying that it had. The trial judge who had the witnesses before him found that the dedication had been accepted by the public, and with this finding we are not disposed to interfere, as the judge who tried the case was in a better situation than we are to determine what the real fact was in this conflict, as there is sufficient evidence in the record to sustain the finding.
It is claimed that the deed from Holmes to defendant revoked the dedication. We are of a different opinion, for the reason that the street if used and accepted by the public in the manner intended,-the dedication was complete, and precluded the owner, as well as all claiming- under him, from asserting an ownership inconsistent with such use. Besides this, the deed from the Peerys and Bouton to Holmes did not convey this strip of ground to Holmes, and for that reason Holmes’ deed to defendants was inoperative, so far as the street in question is concerned.
We perceive nothing in the record justifying- interference with the judgment, and it is hereby affirmed.