54 Mo. 229 | Mo. | 1873
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a proceeding to enjoin the collection of ($16.60) sixteen dollars and sixty cents — and the sale of plaintiff’s lot under an execution issued by the city of St. Charles against the plaintiff, in accordance with a verdict and judgment rendered in certain proceedings for the condemnation of an alley over the lot. The grounds, on which the aid of the court is invoked, are, that the execution was illegal and that a sale under it, though voidable, would cast a eloird on' plaintiff’s title. The injunction was granted and made perpetual.
It appears from the pleadings and'evidence in this case, that the authorities óf St. Charles desired to open an alley adjoining the lot of plaintiff and others ; and that the marshal applied to all those who owned lots on it for a relinquishment to the city of their title; that they all signed the relinquishment except plaintiff, who declined for the reason, as he said, that he had already dedicated that portion of his lot within the limits of the contemplated alley to the public use, and that his deed of relinquishment was, therefore, unnecessary. The city authorities instituted proceedings for its condemnation,
There are no serious objections to the formality of these proceedings ; the whole ground, upon which the plaintiff puts the invalidity of these proceedings, is, that they were unncessary, inasmuch as he had already dedicated the ground to public use; and to sustain this he produced evidence to show he had fenced his lot with reference to such dedication, and had sold other lots in the same way.
We think there is no force in this .point. A dedication bv acts in pais, or by parol, may be a very good and sufficient one; but such matters are necessarily of uncertain proof, and what amounts to a dedication is by no means beyond litigation. It was for the city authorities to decide, whether this proceeding was necessary or not, and as the plaintiff refused to make the relinquishment when applied to for this purpose, it was right and expedient that the matter should be settled in a more conclusive way than by mere declarations and acts of plaintiff.
The only difficulty in the case, to our minds, is the constitutional right of the city to make the plaintiff pay the costs of the proceeding. It seems to be conceded, that the ordinance required that the costs should not, in cases of opening alleys or paving streets, be charged to the city, but should be paid by the adjoining lot holders, doubtless for the reason that they were assumed to have a special interest in such improvements over and above other citizens or the city at large. The ordinance justified the execution for costs against plaintiff, since the former ordinance had exempted the other lot owners who relinquished voluntarily, and as the city was not liable, the plaintiff necessarily was charged with them, if the provisions of the ordinance were carried out.
We think the judgment should be reversed, and it is reversed.
Rehearing
Motion fob Bid-hearing.
Eespondent filed a motion for review and re-hearing, upon which briefs were submitted, with the following points and authorities: