Allen v. City of Charleston

111 S.E. 485, 90 W. Va. 131, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 202
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 111 S.E. 485 (Allen v. City of Charleston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. City of Charleston, 111 S.E. 485, 90 W. Va. 131, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 202 (W. Va. 1922).

Opinion

Meredith, Judge:

In 1883 the Glen Elk Company, a corporation owning a [132]*132large area of land on the north-west side of Elk river in Kanawha County, conveyed a tract of 87 acres, 1 rod and 4 poles to Anthony Allen, being lot No. 21 of the Hill land described upon the map thereof, recorded in the clerk’s office of the county court of said county, together with the use of the roads.and ways laid down on said map, and which by will passed to the daughter of the grantee and . who is the plaintiff in this case and the present owner of the property. At the time of this conveyance there was a public road known as the Elk Road, approximately 30 feet wide, running along the front of'the property on the south side. Between that road and Elk river lay a considerable tract of land which was owned by the Glen Elk Company and which in 1887 it platted into town lots, with intervening streets and alleys, and contributed sufficient of its own lands, together with the county road above mentioned to make this county road 60 feet wide instead of 30 feet wide, and naming it on its plat ‘ ‘ Crescent Road. ’ ’

Some ten or twelve years ago the corporate limits of the city of Charleston were extended so as to include the southern portion of the Allen property, fronting on Crescent Road, as well as Crescent Road itself, and the properties lying between Crescent Road and Elk river.

In 1916 or 1917 the city permanently improved a portion of Crescent Road by constructing a concrete road 24 feet wide, including curbs, in front of the Allen property, the greater portion thereof being on the-southern half of the 60 foot road or street, and hence nearer the property lines on the southern side than on the northern side, being approximately 25 feet distant from an old fence line formerly maintained by plaintiff on the front of her property.

. For many years plaintiff and her predecessor in title kept a fence along the front of her property on the side next the road, and after the road was paved, she constructed a new fence between 20 and 25 feet south of her old line fence, and about 4 feet from the curb of the pavement. In September, 1920, the city, claiming an easement for street purposes in that portion of the land lying between, the curb line and plaintiff’s old fence line, engaged W. J. Weakland & Co. to [133]*133construct upon said strip, at the head of a sewer extending under the road, a catch basin about 15 feet long, 8 feet wide and 8 feet deep, to catch the water, sand and debris collecting there from a small drain, called Gunter Hollow, so as to carry the water into said sewer and to keep the sand and debris from entering the sewer.

The work had proceeded but a short time, when plaintiff filed her bill and obtained an injunction against the city, its officers, agents, employees and said contractors, enjoining them from trespassing upon said land for any purpose. In her bill she alleges title and possession of said lands, irreparable damage and want of legal remedy, and also that about the time the city began the permanent improvement of the road, a dispute having arisen between her and the city as to the location of her property line and the street line, she and the city agreed that the true line between her property and the street line should be and was where her new fence was built, and which is about four feet from the line of the curb.

The defendants demurred to the bill and also filed an answer. In their answer they admit the plaintiff’s title to her land, except they aver that the city owns an easement for street purposes over the disputed strip; that said strip had been dedicated to public use and so used for a roadway for a great many years, and defendant had for many years maintained a sewer through said strip to the line of the old fence; they also denied taking or damaging any of plaintiff’s property or that they intended doing so, and likewise denied that there was any agreement between plaintiff and the city as to the true line between her property and said road, or that the road was paved in conformity to any such agreement.

Depositions were taken and filed on behalf of plaintiff and defendants; the cause was heard upon the bill, injunction order, demurrer, answer, general replication thereto and the depositions. The court found that the plaintiff was not entitled to the relief prayed for, dissolved the injunction and dismissed her bill at her costs.

From this decree plaintiff appealed to this court.

The first question involved is whether equity had jurisdiction. Plaintiff’s title to the land in controversy, so far [134]*134as the fee is concerned, is admitted, but the city claims that this fee is subject to its easement for street purposes, and to that extent, and that only, plaintiff’s title is denied by the answer. If there were no dispute as to title, equity would, without question, have jurisdiction. In the case of Pierpoint v. Town of Harrisville, 9 W. Va. 215, and Yates v. West Grafton, 33 W. Va. 507, 11 S. E. 8, it was held that injunction will lie to restrain a town from opening streets through a person’s land, without first condemning it according to law, where there has been no dedication of such streets to the public use. In each of those cases the defendants answered, admitting the title of plaintiff to the land over which the streets had been laid or constructed, but asserted a dedication thereof for street purposes, and on final hearing this court perpetuated the injunction till the town should acquire legal right to open such streets. There the right or title to the asserted easements was determined in a court of equity.

In the case of Jarvis v. Grafton, 44 W. Va. 453, 30 S. E. 178, the plaintiff obtained ian injunction restraining the town from ppening an alley through premises claimed by her, and involved a dispute as to the existence of an easement, as in this case, she alleging that the town had no easement and it claiming it had. This court reversed the finding of the circuit court, though there was conflicting oral testimony, found that the alley had been dedicated by a former owner of the property, and had been accepted by defendant, and dismissed plaintiff’s bill.

In the case of Wenger v. Fisher, 55 W. Va. 13, 46 S. E. 695, the plaintiff obtained an injunction restraining the county court of Randolph County from making a change in the roads so as to take his lands. Defendants demurred for want of equity in the bill, but the demurrer was overruled. Defendants answered that plaintiff had consented to such change in the road. Numerous depositions were taken on both sides as to whether such consent had been given, and on final hearing the circuit court dissolved the injunction, but this court upon appeal held that equity had jurisdiction, and [135]*135on review of the testimony reversed the ease and perpetuated the injunction.

One of the leading eases involving this question is that of Manchester Cotton Mills v. Manchester, 25 Gratt. (Va.) 825. In that ease the authorities of the town notified the plaintiff corporation that they intended to remove three brick buildings owned by plaintiff, which the authorities- of the town claimed encroached on a street of the town. The plaintiff and its predecessors asserted title and possession for more than twenty years, the town claimed that the land had been dedicated as a street by a prior owner under whom plaintiff claimed title. This dedication was denied by plaintiff.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sexton v. Public Service Commission
423 S.E.2d 914 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1992)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 S.E. 485, 90 W. Va. 131, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-city-of-charleston-wva-1922.