71 Ky. 121 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1871
delivered the opinion oe the court.
Israel LucIIoav died in tbe county of Kenton many years since, leaving his wife and seAreral children surviving him. He made a last will and testament, by which he left his wife his executrix, and directs her, if necessary, to dispose of a part of his real estate for the payment of debts and the maintenance of his family, designating by his will that portion of his real estate he desired sold. His valuable lands were located near the city of Covington, and his Avish was that thirty acres of this land should be sold in lots not exceeding one quarter of an acre each. After his death his widow (A. Ludlow), the executrix, ascertaining that the indebtedness was much larger than the devisor himself supposed, and there being but little property outside the real estate for the payment of the same and the support of her family, filed her bill in equity in the Kenton Circuit Court, with several amendments thereto, asking a sale of a part of the Ludlow farm near Covington for the payment of these debts, etc.
It Avas alleged that a sale of this land in lots would greatly
The present action is instituted by the town of West Covington, as plaintiff, against B. U. Freking, defendant, alleging that the plaintiff is a town incorporated by the laws of the state of Kentucky as the town of West Covington, located in Kenton County, and that the plaintiff is the owner and entitled to the possession of a tract of land in Kenton County, comprising a strip four rods wide along the entire western line of its boundary, and that the defendant, B. U. Freking, holds the possession of the same without right, etc.; wherefore the plaintiff prays judgment for the landj etc.
Upon this issue the case was presented to the jury, and after hearing the testimony on the part of the plaintiff the court, at the instance of defendant’s counsel, instructed the jury to find for the defendant, and a verdict was so rendered. The plaintiff then excepted, and filed grounds for a new trial. The motion for a new trial was overruled, and the case is brought to this court by appeal.
The plaintiff now insists that the court erred in the instructions given. There are several questions of minor importance made by counsel for appellant in the case that do not affect materially the rights of the parties, and will not be considered. The controlling question is as to the right of the plaintiff to maintain this action.
The plaintiff introduced as evidence the whole record in the case of Ludlow’s executors v. Ludlow’s heirs, &c., already referred to, showing the sale of many of these lots laid off by the commissioner; also the conveyances to the purchaser, the width of the street, and the boundaries of each lot; and also that the land in controversy was within the boundary of land divided into lots under the judgment rendered in 1847, and that it was also within the boundary of the town of West Covington. The proof also tended to show that a part of the land described in the petition was a part of one of the streets of West Covington, and that the 'defendant, by herself or tenant, had inclosed a small part of this street to the extent of a few feet. The act incorporating West Covington was passed in the year 1858. This act confers upon the trustees named the ordinary powers usually belonging to trustees of towns. There is no title to this land vested in the trustees by the act, and the evidence is silent upon this subject.
The authorities presented, when carefully scrutinized, all harmonize with reference to the rule of law applicable to this case. The law is that to maintain this action the plaintiff must be vested with the legal title; this title dedueible from the commonwealth, or vested in the party suing by some legislative enactment by the consent or procurement of the owner of the soil, or by such a continued peaceable and adverse possession as would vest the title in him.
In the case of the Trustees of Falmouth v. Horter (4 Litt.
In the case of McMillan v. Brown (1 A. K. Marshall) the plaintiff instituted his action, claiming to have derived title from the trustees of the town of Cynthiana. In this case the title to the land was expressly vested in the trustees by an act of the legislature, with the power to sell.
In the ease of Coleman v. Morrison (1 A. K. Marshall) the title was vested in the trustees, who instituted the action by the procurement of the owner of the land.
In the case of the Trustees of Augusta v. Perkins the land was condemned, and the title vested in trustees.
In the case of Hawes’s heirs v. The Town of Hawesville (6 Bush, 232) the heirs of Halves had vested the title in the trustees by legislative enactment.
In the case of Rowan’s executors v. The Town of Portland (8 Dana) the court decided that the proprietors of the land having sold the lots and laid off the streets, the purchasers and all others may use the streets according to their appropriate purposes, free from all claim of the proprietor inconsistent with that use.
In the case of Wickliffe v. The City of Lexington there was written evidence of the dedication; but the court decided in that case that a parol dedication might be made of the streets for the use of the public, and the owner can not recover in ejectment against those claiming the use or the right of way under such a dedication.
Applying the principles of law as settled by these decisions
In making the sales of the lots the purchasers bought to the center of the street, and paid to Mrs. Ludlow the money for that boundary. This vested them with the fee not only of the lot inclosed, but to the middle of the street. No sales were made of lots on the west side of the street, and the title or fee still remains in Mrs. Ludlow. She has never parted with this title by deed or otherwise. The title to the whole street is in Mrs. Ludlow and her vendees, she owning on the west side and they on the eastern side. This title they hold subject to the use of the public. Mrs. Ludlow and her vendees can not deprive the public of this use. This was a parol dedication to the public by Mrs. Ludlow of the right to use and enjoy these streets for all the purposes pertaining to such an easement.
This dedication does not, however, divest her of the right to the soil. An abandonment by the town or the public of these streets would entitle Mrs. Ludlow and her vendees to hold them free from any incumbrance. The act of the legislature incorporating the town in 1858 passed no title to the trustees. This act too was passed ten or twelve years after the streets were laid out, and is entirely silent upon the question of title. It does not appear that the defendant aided in the procurement of this act in any way; but on the contrary that the use the public acquired in and over the streets was many years before the town was incorporated.
This is no action to recover a right to pass over the road, or to enforce such a right, but to recover the land itself. No such title is shown as authorizes a recovery. The defendant is the owner and entitled to the possession of the land, subject
The verdict of the jury is sustained by the proof, and the court properly gave the instruction.
The judgment is affirmed.