183 Iowa 949 | Iowa | 1918
In the year 1898, one Burleigh, being'the owner of a tract of land in the city of Des Moines, platted it into two ranges or tiers of lots, separated by an alley 14 feet in width. Among these lots, one described as No. 9, being 50 feet in width, and extending east and west, was bounded on the west end by the alley above mentioned. On
The original platting of the property and the subsequent vacation of that part of the alley, at the time and in the maimer alleged, are not made a matter of dispute. It is the position of the appellants, however, that the effect of the vacation of the alley ivas not to vest the title in equal proportions in the owners of the abutting lots, under the provisions of Code Section 919, but to take away the easement in the alley which had been made appurtenant to such lots by the original dedication, and to restore the entire unincumbered title to such alley to Hoyt Sherman, from the trustees of whose estate defendants allege they have acquired title by quitclaim deed. Defendants claim first to have acquired title to Lot 16, with other lots on the west side of the vacated alley, in the summer of 1916. Their deeds to these lots are' not shown in the record, but it seems to be assumed in argilment that they were from the trustees of the Sherman estate, and we will so consider it. Evidently, this conveyance, like that made the plaintiff, contained no express mention' of the alley, but simply described the lots by number. Defendants then sought to procure a deed expressly conveying the .alley. One Oleson had acted
The principal questions discussed by counsel in this court are as follows: (1.) The legal effect of the vacation of the alley upon the title to the land included therein; and (2) whether the plaintiff’s claim of title may properly be upheld, because of adverse possession by her for the period of 10 years.
The decree below is — Affirmed.