Bailey v. Culver

12 Mo. App. 175, 1882 Mo. App. LEXIS 28
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 9, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 12 Mo. App. 175 (Bailey v. Culver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Culver, 12 Mo. App. 175, 1882 Mo. App. LEXIS 28 (Mo. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

Lewis, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Peter Lindell, who died in 1861, acquired by purchase, in May, 1825, what is now known as block No. 164, in the city of St, Louis, bounded on the north by Washington Avenue, on the south by St. Charles, ' on the east by Seventh, and on the west by Eighth Street. In 1862, there was a voluntary partition among his heirs of this property, together with other large bodies of real estate in the city and its suburbs. Three commissioners were appointed by agreement, who made an elaborate report, with plats of the blocks, lots, streets, and alleys, and an allotment of their several shares to the ten heirs. This report was duly recorded, and accepted as final. On the plat of block 164 there was represented an alley twelve feet wide running straight through the middle of the block from Seventh to Eighth Streets, or from east to west. The report of the commissioners contained the following language : —

“And the said Sweringen, Dickson, and Clark examined and approved of the said surveys, maps, and plats of said Cozens, and of all the streets, lanes, and alleys laid down and described on said maps and plats ; and each and all of said streets, lanes, and alleys' are necessary to be established and dedicated, and are hereby established and dedicated, for [179]*179tbe use of each and all of said heirs-at-law of Peter Lindell, deceased, as the same are laid down and marked on the said maps and plats and surveys of William H. Cozens, Esquire, the surveyor, and made a part of this report.”

The entire block No. 164, having frontages of two hundred and seventy feet each on Washington Avenue and St. Charles Street, was divided into twenty-three lots, of which ten had fronts of twenty-seven feet each, on Washington Avenue, and thirteen had fractional equal fronts of about twenty and two-thirds feet each on St. Charles Street. All the lots were bounded in the rear by the alley twelve feet wide. In October, 1879, the plaintiffs, holding under the partition above described, were owners of tbe three lots at the extreme southeast corner of the block, fronting about sixty-three feet on St. Charles, with a side line on Seventh Street. The defendants, holding under the same title, were owners of the entire west end of the block, having about one hundred and eight feet front on Washington Avenue, and about sixty-three feet on St. Charles Street. Desiring to erect on their property a large building for mercantile purposes, to cost $150,000, which should extend clear through from Washington Avenue to St. Charles Street, the defendants endeavored to obtain the consent of other property-owners in the block to a closing of the alley at its west end, and the substitution of a deflected exit into St. Charles Street, over part of the defendants’ ground. Other property-owners consented, but the plaintiffs refused. The defendants then procured the passage of an ordinance by the municipal assembly of the city,whereby the west end of,the alley, to the extent of eighty-six feet and nine inches in the north line, and seventy-four feet three inches in the south line, measuring from Eighth Street, was “vacated and abolished.” Among other stipulations in the ordinance, it was provided that the adjacent owners should dedicate, grade, and pave an alley, not less than twelve feet wide, commencing on St. Charles Street and [180]*180running northwardly and eastwardly, to intersect with the alley not vacated, and further so described as’to occupy ground belonging to the defendants. Provision was made also for an indemnifying bond in favor of the city, to be given by the defendants, against suits for damages, etc. The plaintiff’s opposed the passage of this ordinance, and through all the proceedings protested and remonstrated against the closing of any part of the alley, as an unlawful and unjust invasion of their rights. The defendants erected their building in the manner proposed, and conformed to the provisions of the ordinance in opening and finishing the deflected alley. The plaintiffs then instituted this suit, praying that the defendants be compelled to remove their building, and restore the alley to its original condition, and that they be restrained by perpetual injunction from making or maintaining any further obstructions, etc. Upon final hearing the plaintiff’s bill was dismissed.

It is contended by the plaintiffs, that there was vested in them, as a property right, • an easement or right of way through the entire alley, as it existed before the obstruction, from end to end; that the city of St. Louis never acquired any property therein, or any control over the same, by which it could divest them of their right aforesaid, and that the passage of the ordinance and the obstruction complained of, amount to a confiscation of their property and an unauthorized seizure of their rights. All this is unquestionably true if, as the plaintiffs insist, the alley was never dedicated to the public use, but was, from first to last, a mere private easement for the exclusive use and enjoyment of the abutting lot-owners. But if the plaintiffs never acquired any right in the obstructed part of the alley, other than such as they might assert as members of the general public, then it is equally certain that they are concluded by the action of the city authorities, in the exercise of an undoubted charter power.

The plaintiffs rely, for their claim, chiefly on the words [181]*181used in the report of the commissioners in partition, as follows : “And each and all of said streets, lanes, and alleys are necessary to be established and dedicated, and are hereby established and dedicated for the use of each and all of said heirs-at-law of Peter Lindell, deceased.” If the commissioners really mean by this to set apart, as the property of all the heirs, and for their exclusive and proprietary enjoyment, all the “ streets, lanes, and alleys, as laid down and marked on the said maps and plats,” then their words are very inaptly chosen. For, according to the best authorities, there can be no such thing as a dedication to private uses. Washb. on Ease. (3rded.) 181. If, however, they mean only that, for the use and best interests of all the heirs, it is necessary to dedicate the streets, lanes, and alleys to the public use, this will, at least, admit of a rational interpretation. Streets, lanes, and alleys are all disposed of together, in one sentence, as composing a single class of subjects. What is meant of any one is meant of all the rest. The proprietary right claimed by the plaintiffs in the alley under consideration, would necessarily include a right in all the proprietors of the block, by agreement, to close the alley against the public. The maps of the property divided include about twenty streets and twenty-two alleys. Do the commissioners mean to say that all these streets and alleys (including Lindell Avenue, which was then first laid out by the commissioners, and whose status was thus created and fixed forever) are to be held by the Lindell heirs in exclusive property, with rights of closure, and perpetually beyond the control of municipal authority and the public interests which it represents ? If they do not, which we think is the most reasonable supposition, then they do not mean so much as to any of them. If they intend that, so far as they have any authority to speak in the matter, Washington Avenue, St. Charles Street, and eighteen other streets marked on the maps, shall be left and dedicated to the public use, with all the incidents of [182]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 Mo. App. 175, 1882 Mo. App. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-culver-moctapp-1882.