42 W. Va. 724 | W. Va. | 1896
This was a suit in equity, brought by Valeria S. Stur-mer, who sued on her own behalf and all the other taxpayers of Eandolph county, against Warwick Hutton, Patrick Criekard, L. D. Greynolds, and E. J. Smith, in the Circuit Court of Eandolph county, on the 16th day of May, 1895. The plaintiff, in her bill, alleges that she is the owner in fee simple of a certain lot in the town of Beverly, whereon is situated a large hotel building, which has long been known first as the Leonard and then as the Valley House; that said house is situated directly on Water street, and that between it and Main or Jacob street there is situated a small lot of ground, and that the frontage of said hotel has always been towards the said Main or Jacob street upon said lot of ground; that her title has been derived from one Adam Myers, who was the fee-simple owner thereof in the year 1813, and of some land adjoining said hotel property on the north side thereof, upon which the jail was erected. In the year 1813 the county authorities had already located and erected the county court house upon the southern end of a piece of ground which they then claimed to own which included the lot of ground in front of said hotel property on Main or Jacob street, which they claimed to have been donated to them for public purposes. At that time no permanent jail building had been erected for the use of said county, and the county coui’t was considering the erection of a county jail upon said piece of ground in front of said hotel property. Said Myers, who was then the owner of the hotel property, objected to the erection of the jail on said lot, and, in order to avoid it, proposed to convey to the said county a sufficient lot of ground below and northward for said jail purposes, and there was an order of the county court of said county, a copy of which is filed with the deposition of George W. Printz, in said cause, “at a county court held for the county of Eandolph on the 24th day of November, 1813, it was ordered that William Marteny aud William Steer be appointed commissioners to contract with Adam Myers for land to build a jail on, and to enter into an agreement with said Myers that the public will put no
“This indenture, made this 25th day of November, 1813, .between Adam Myers and Mary Myers of the county of Randolph, of the one part, and William Marteny and William Steer, commissioners appointed by an order of the county court of Randolph county, at the November term, 1813, to contract with the said Myers for ground to build a public jail on, of the other part, witnesseth, that the said Adam Myers and Mary Myers, for and in consideration of the sum of one dollar, as well as one moiety of the public ground opposite to and in front of said Myers House, so far as the said public ground is not to be occupied by public buildings, to them by the said William Marteny and William Steer in hand paid, the receipt whereof the said Adam Myers and Mary Myers hereby acknowdedge, have granted, bargained, sold, and confirmed, and by these presents doth grant, bargain, sell and convey, unto the said William Marteny and William Steer, commissioners for the said court, a certain lot of land containing one-half quarter*727 of an acre, lying and being in the town of Beverly, adjoining of the public ground, being part of lot known on the plan of said town by ‘No. 5’; to have and to hold said lot or parcel of land, with the appurtenances thereto belonging, to them, the said commissioners for the use of the said court and their successors, to the only proper use and be-hoof of the said court and their successors forever; and the said Adam Myers and Mary Myers for themselves, their heirs, executors, and administrators, doth hereby covenant and agree with the said commissioners that they, the said Adam Myers and Mary Myers, and their heirs, etc., the said lot or parcel of land, with its appurtenances, to them, the said commissioners, against them, the said Adam Myers and Mary Myers and their heirs, and against all persons whomsoever, shall warrant and defend. In witness whereof the said Adam Myers and Mary Myers have hereunto set their hands and fixed their seals, the day and year above writteu.
“Adam Myers. [Seal.]
[Seal.]
“William MarteNy. [Seal.]
[Seal.]
“Signed, sealed, and delivered in presence of--.”
—Which deed appears to have been duly recorded in said county. The plaintiff also alleges that this contract was faithfully performed and carried out by the then county court and its successors in office, and said lot was delivered to the public as a public square or common, and from the 25th day of November, 1813, until some time in 1890, a period of over three-fourths of a century, said dedication of said piece of ground for a public square or common was universally recognized, and said ground was permitted to remain uninclosed, without buildings, and was constantly used by the public officers of said county as aplace of sales, and by said Myers, his vendees, and the public generally as a public square or common, and was universally recognized, accepted, and used by the public as such. The plaintiff further says that if the said county court did have an unqualified fee simple in said ground, by said contract with the said Myers, and by its clear acts of
But the plaintiff charges that the defendant, the county court, determined to erect a new courthouse upon an entirely different lot or piece of ground iu the town of Beverly, purchased for that purpose, and afterwards determined, in direct violation of the rights of the public, and of the heirs of said Myers, and in the face of the long continued use by dedication and acceptance of said public square or common, to attempt to sell a fee simple title to said public square or common; and in pursuance of said unlawful purpose entered certain orders of record directing a sale of the same, and certain commissioners, in accordance with said orders, did attempt to sell the same in connection with the old courthouse, at which pretended sale the defendants Greynolds, Hutton, and Crick-ard became joint purchasers thereof; and, after a pretended compliance with the terms of sale, they, the said Hutton, Greynold, and Crickard, as plaintiff charges, in violation of law and the vested right of the public, took unlawful possession of said public square, and erected a fence around the same, which has been maintained continuously until a few days ago, when a portion of the same was removed, and about one-half of the said lot was thrown open again; and it was publicly announced that the said Greynolds, Hutton, and Crickard have sold said portion to the defendant Smith, and that said Smith would erect thereon a large three-story frame business building fronting on Main or Jacob street, and with the rear thereof coming up directly to the porch in front of said hotel property so owned by the plaintiff, whereby the front entrance of said hotel prop-ei’ty will be almost entirely destroyed, the light of the front rooms of said hotel would be almost entirely destroyed, and other special and irreparable damage would be done to the plaintiff, and the value of said property greatly depreciated; and in pursuance of this unlawful design and pur
On the 21st day of June, 1895, a motion was made in vacation to dissolve the injunction awarded in this cause, which was overruled, and on the 17th day of October, 1895, the cause was finally heard, the injunction was perpetuated, and the defendants were required in sixty days to remove the fences and building stone from said lot, and said lot was declared to have been dedicated to the uses set forth in plaintiff’s bill, and all conveyances and contracts which had been made by the defendants from one to the other, whereby it had been sought to vest in any or either of them a fee-simple title in and to said lot, or any part of it, tor private use, were set aside, and declared null and void,
The first error assigned and relied on is that “it was error to hold that the said lot of ground had ever been dedicated to the public by the county court of Randolph county, or by any other person, because there is no proof in the cause sufficient to establish the fact of such dedication,” Anderson, in his valuable Dictionary of Law, defines “Dedication” as “the appropriation to public uses of some right or property, as the dedication of a highway, landing, square, park, land for school purposes,” etc. “The act of giving or devoting property to some public use, an appropriation of realty by the owner to the use of the public, and the adoption thereof by the public, as the dedication of soil for a highway, has respect to the possession of the land, not to the permanent estate, express when explicitly made by oral declarations, deed, or vote, implied when there is acquiescence in a public use.” In 5 Am. & Eng. Ene. Law, p. 416; under the word “dedication,” we find it stated that dedication by the common law was confined to the purpose of highways, but in this country the doctrine has a wider application, and its limit has been judicially defined to extend to public squares, common lots, burying grounds, school lots, and lots for church purposes and pious and charitable uses generally, and in many cases where the use was either expressly or from the necessity of the case limited to a small portion of the public. Public squares were very early recognized as a legitimate public use, and the same rules of law are applicable to the dedication of public squares as to the dedication of highways.
In the celebrated case of City of New Orleans v. U. S., 10 Pet. 662, the question was whether certain land lying between Water street and the river, which had been used for commercial purposes as a wharf, was public property, as having been dedicated for the purpose, or whether it could be divided up and sold to private parties for private purposes. In that case it was held that: “In order to dedi
Now, when we seek the true intent of the original transaction between Adam Myers and the county court it is found in the order entered by said court on the 24th day of November, 1813, more than eighty years before the institution of this suit, which order reads as follows: “Ordered, William Marteny and William Steer be appointed commissioners to contract with Adam Myers for land to build a jail on and to enter into an agreement with said Myers that the public will put no buildings on the public square unoccupied opposite said Myers House, but it to remain for the use of the public.” The intention of that order is plain and unequivocal; and on the next day the said Adam Myers and wife conveyed to said commissioners a lot for the jail for the consideration of one dollar as well as one moiety of the public ground opposite to and in front of said Myers House so far as (that is, to the extent that) said public ground was not to be occupied by public buildings. It seems that neither the court nor said Myers then contemplated that private individuals would ever erect buildings on said square, and so the concluding words of said order provided, “But it (the public square) was to remain for the use of the public;” and if the fee simple of said public square was in the county court, what more complete dedication of the same to the public could have been asked or desired than this order? And then the proof shows that
We have seen in one of the cases above quoted that a public square occupies much the same relation to the public as a highway or street does. So in the case of City of Wheeling v. Campbell, 12 W. Va. 36, it was held that, “where a street in Wheeling had been used by the public for more than forty years as a street, it was held to have been dedicated to public use.” Again, in the case of Taylor v. Philippi, 35 W. Va. 554 (14 S. E. 130) it was held that, where W., being the owner of land, surveyed and plotted the same into lots, streets, and alleys, which plat was recorded, and the town named by the legislature, such acts and conduct on the part of the owner constitute prima facie evidence of the intent on his part to dedicate such street to public use. An acceptance of such dedication by the proper local authorities may be implied as well as express, such as the recognition of and naming of it as a street of the town by an ordinance of the town council, or any actual appropriation of the property for the use designed. In this connection I call attention to the fact that the order of the county court dated November 24,1813, as well as the order of July 3, 1895, spoke of this ground as the public square, and the evidence shows that through all this time it was recognized, used, and treated as a public square, was so treated by the county court, and so recognized and accepted by the public; and we must conclude that it was dedicated as such, and, after it has been for so long a time dedicated to the public as a public square, and accepted and used as such, even if there was no such covenant as appears on the face of the deed from Adam Myers and wife to said commissioners, the county court could not divide up said public square, and sell it to private individuals for private purposes.
The decree complained of must be affirmed.