Bailey v. Ravalli County

653 P.2d 139, 201 Mont. 138
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1982
Docket81-542
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 653 P.2d 139 (Bailey v. Ravalli County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Ravalli County, 653 P.2d 139, 201 Mont. 138 (Mo. 1982).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HARRISON

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal arises from an action for quiet title to one-half of the roadway adjoining lots owned by plaintiffs separately in Sunnyside Orchards No. 3, a platted orchard tract in Ravalli County, Montana. After trial on June 8, 1981, the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District found the land in question had been abandoned and closed by the Ravalli County Commissioners in 1944 and, as a result, reverted to the abutting owners, each receiving to the center of the formerly platted road.

From that judgment defendants appeal.

The plat of Sunnyside Orchards No. 3 was filed and recorded on October 16, 1909. The statutory certificate of dedication stated in part:

“The land included in all streets, avenues, alleys, parks and public square shown on said plat are hereby granted and dedicated to the use of the public forever.”

On April 5, 1944, a petition for county road closure with twelve signatures was filed with the Ravalli County Clerk *141 and Recorder. The petition requested the closure of eight roads, six of which were portions of roads in Sunnyside Orchards subdivision. One of those six, the platted road between Blocks 10 and 11 to the north line of Lot 30, Block 10, and Lot 3, Block 11, is the subject of this action. H. H. Benson, the county surveyor, and Joel P. Antrim, a county commissioner and one of the petitioners, were appointed as viewers by the county commission on April 5, 1944. The viewers’ report recommended closing the roads. This report was filed with the county clerk and recorder May 4, 1944, after having been accepted and ordered filed by the commissioners May 3, 1944. The Commissioners’ Minute Book recorded the proceeding on May 3, 1944, with the following statement:

“ ‘We find the roads are not being used as public roads and are not likely to be used as such, and closing of said roads would not inconvenience the public in any degree. Therefore we recommend that the described roads be closed as petitioned for.’ Upon motion made and seconded report was accepted and ordered filed.”

After 1944, neither the plaintiffs nor their predecessors in interest paid any taxes on any portion of the roadway, and no portion of the roadway was fenced into the lands now belonging to respondents until the spring or summer of 1980.

On October 24, 1980, the Board of Ravalli County Commissioners directed removal of obstructions in the roadway between Blocks 10 and 11 of Sunnyside Orchards No. 3. Respondent Bailey had placed a fence along the center of the road prior to the county commissioner’s directive.

The following issues are presented for consideration by this Court:

1. Whether a statutory dedication of lands designated for streets and alleys in a 1909 township creates a public roadway?

2. Whether the platted road in Sunnyside Orchards No. 3 between Blocks 10 and 11 to the north line of Lot 30, Block *142 10, and Lot 3, Block 11, was closed and abandoned by the Ravalli County Commissioners on May 3, 1944?

3. If so, whether the land which made up that road reverted to the abutting owners each receiving to the center line of the formerly platted road?

4. Whether a subsequent purchaser of land adjoining a dedicated roadway, where the purchase does not include any portion of the roadway, acquires any interest therein if the roadway has been closed?

5. Whether the plaintiffs are entitled to a decree quieting title in them to the lands, under claim of acquisition by operation of the law, without payment of taxes or being in possession of the premises for the statutory period of time?

6. Whether Ravalli County should be ordered to pay respondents’ attorney fees?

Did the statutory dedication of lands designated for streets and alleys in the 1909 plat create a public highway?

In our analysis of the controlling statutes during the periods here involved, we emphasize that there has been constant and continuous amendment and modification of the statutes pertaining to streets, roads and highways from the 1895 code on down through to the present. It therefore becomes critically necessary to consider the statutes as actually in effect at any specific date.

As previously stated, the 1909 certificate of dedication in pertinent part stated:

“The land included in all streets, avenues, alleys, . . .shown on said plat are hereby granted and dedicated to the use of the public forever.”

In the making of this plat, the owners complied with Section 3470, Revised Codes of Montana 1907, which had been in effect since at least 1895. In addition, section 3475, Revised Codes of Montana 1907, as also in effect since 1895, provided in pertinent part:

“Every. . .grant to the public. . .marked or noted as such on the plat of the city or town, or addition, must be considered, to all intents and purposes, as a deed to the said *143 donee.”

We, therefore, find that there was compliance with the 1907 codes in the making of the dedication, and that such dedication must be considered as a deed to the public. The effect of that dedication is described in section 1337, Revised Codes of Montana 1907, which in pertinent part states:

“All highways, roads, streets, alleys,. . .laid out. . .by the public. . ., or if laid out or erected by others, dedicated or abandoned to the public, . . . are public highways.”

The foregoing section was enacted as a part of chapter 44 of the 1903 Session Laws. In addition, in the same session laws, section 1342, Revised Codes of Montana 1907, was enacted which in pertinent part stated:

“By taking or accepting land for a highway the public acquire only the right of way and the incidents necessary to enjoying and maintaining the same. . .”

We, therefore, conclude that by the dedication, the roadway or street here in question was classified by the 1907 codes as being a “public highway.” In addition, we hold that in accordance with the statutes, the plat dedication to the public was the equivalent of a right-of-way deed under which the public acquired only the right-of-way and incidents necessary to enjoying and maintaining the public highway. We, therefore, hold that the dedication did create a public roadway or highway in 1909.

Was the platted road closed and abandoned by the Ravalli County Commissioners on May 3, 1944?

Section 1635, R.C.M. 1935, provides that ten, or a majority of the freeholders of a road district, may petition, in writing, the Board of County Commissioners to discontinue any public highway. The record here establishes that such a petition was filed. Section 1637, R.C.M. 1935, describes the procedure to be followed on investigating the feasibility and desirability of granting the prayer of the petition, but is not pertinent here. Section 1638, R.C.M. 1935, is the section which describes the action to be taken by the commissioners on the petition for vacation and in pertinent part states:

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653 P.2d 139, 201 Mont. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-ravalli-county-mont-1982.