Beale v. Town of Takoma Park

100 A. 379, 130 Md. 297, 1917 Md. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 100 A. 379 (Beale v. Town of Takoma Park) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beale v. Town of Takoma Park, 100 A. 379, 130 Md. 297, 1917 Md. LEXIS 126 (Md. 1917).

Opinion

Bomd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants filed a bill in equity to enjoin the defendants from selling or offering for sale their property situated on Grant avenue and Llaneock avenue on what is known as General S. S. Carroll’s Addition to Takoma Park, Md., for the enforcement of special assessments made against their lands for the extension of a water main on Grant avenue and a four-inch main on Hancock avenue, and to have said special assessment declared null and void. The defendants are the Town of Takoma Park and the Mayor and Councihnen of said town, individually. Takoma Park was first incorporated in 1890 (by Ch. 480 of the Acts of that year), and the charter *300 was amended by Chapter 310 of the Acts of 1896, which, with some other amendments, constitute sections 571 to- 633, inclusive, of Article 16 of the Code of Public Local Laws, title Montgomery County, as codified by Chapter 790 of the Acts of 1912.

The principal questions involved are: First, whether there has been a dedication of the streets or avenues on which the water mains were laid; and, second, whether assuming they had been so dedicated the requirements of the charter have been complied with in making the assessments and offering the properties for sale.

First: In 1893 a creditors’ bill was filed to sell the lands of General S. S. Carroll, deceased. The defendants were his widow, his daughter, Katherine O. Beale and John W. Beale, her husband, who are plaintiffs in this case, and his son, Samuel S. Carroll, Jr. A decree was passed, in which Blair Lee and Charles W. Prettyman were appointed trustees to sell the property. On July 13th, 1893, the trustees reported to the Court that they had the portion of the land belonging to the late S-. S. Carroll which was separated from the rest of his land by a street known as Carroll avenue,, and containing about 33% acres, divided by a competent surveyor into squares or sections with proposed streets laid down thereon, as would appear by reference to1 one of the plats therewith filed; that they offered the property for sale in sections or parcels in accordance with the plat and had sold Section 1 to George N. Beale. That sale was duly ratified. A copy of the plat was filed with the bill in this case.

Carroll avenue was already in existence when the plat was made, being one of the established streets of the town. Hancock avenue is nearly parallel with Carroll avenue, and is the only street in the subdivision running in that direction laid out on the plat. While they are not strictly so, Grant, Lee, Sherman and Sheridan avenues may be said to be at right angles with Carroll avenue. They are parallel to each *301 other and cross Hancock avenue. There are no other streets on the plat, except Carroll, which borders on but is not a part of the tract subdivided.

On December 5th, 1894, the trustees filed another report stating that they had again offered the property at public auction, and that “The plat was shown and it was announced by said trustees that Hancock avenue as laid down on said plat would be dedicated to those purchasing lots as a right of way to and from the same, and the land included in said avenue would be deducted from the area of the parcels sold, and also that that portion of land indicated, on said plat as the east half of, twentyi-five feet in width, Grant avenue would be in like manner reserved as a right of way south from its intersection with Hancock avenue for the use of the lot purchasers.”

They then reported a sale to George N. Beale of Section 3, showing1 that they had deducted the area contained in the streets. The report concluded as follows: “Your trustees also desire the assent of the Court to their dedication of the land contained in the space marked Hancock street and the east 25 feet of the width of Grant street south of Hancock street, as a right of way for those purchasing lots or parcels of the land.” That sale was ratified in the usual form, and while there was no special reference to it in the order, the ratification was an approval of the division of the property. The deed of the trustees to George N. Beale for Section 1 conveyed the land to the middle of Grant street, and the one for Section 3, after referring to1 the plat for a description, granted to him a right of way over Hancock avenue from the line of Lee avenue to the land, of H. P. R. Holt, and also a right of way over Grant avenue, lying south of Hancock avenue, and added that “the rights of way or parts of streets herein expressly set forth are the only rights of way appurtenant to the said Section 3 over the land in said cause so decreed to be sold.”

*302 By the will of George N. Beale, dated March 11, 1907, he left to his widow for life all of his property, and upon her death he left to his son, John W. Beale, certain properties including “the lots with the three (3) houses thereon on the south side of Grant avenue, Takoma Park, Maryland,” and to his daughter certain properties including “all of the prop*erty with the houses thereon (hack of my place called ‘Mortaumonde’) hounded by Lee, Hancock and Grant avenue, in Takoma Park, Maryland,” and to his grand-daughter his “country house in Takoma Park, Maryland, called ‘Mortaumonde,’ its contents, and the attached grounds, stable and out-houses, the said grounds being bounded by Carroll, Grant and Lee avenue, on the three sides, and on the fourth by a fence running from Grant to Lee avenues.” The trustees having sold other property left by General Carroll, the proceeds of which were sufficient to pay off his indebtedness, made no more sales in that addition. Katherine C. Beale and John W. Beale, her husband, and Samuel S. Carroll made a deed of partition, by which Mr. Carroll conveyed to Mrs. Beale, by courses and distances, a tract of land which substantially corresponds with the outlines of the addition, excluding what had been sold to George N. Beale, but none of the avenues are mentioned, excepting, Carroll. That deed includes Section 7, upon which was the assessment against Mrs. Beale complained of.

George N. Beale in his lifetime sold seven lots in Section 1. In all of the deeds the plat of the trustees is referred to, and in all except two Grant avenue is called for—the two lots not fronting on that avenue. Eive of those deeds were made in the year 1895, one in 1896 and one in 1898. One of those lots fronting 178 feet on Grant avenue was reconveyed to said Beale in 1903, and the two lots not fronting on that avenue were also' reconveyed to him that year. In his life time the town authorities had laid down a water main on Grant avenue, extending from Carroll avenue to a point 89 feet from Hancock avenue. He built a residence on Section *303 3, fronting' on Carroll avenue, and built on the rear of that section five houses, all of which he connected, by written pen-mission of the town authorities, with the water main, laid by the town on Grant avenue. He also built on Section 1 houses which were connected with the water main by permission of those authorities. When he built his houses on the rear portion of ¡Section 3, he applied for and obtained a permit from the town authorities,, as required by the ordinances, in force. It will be remembered that the water mains now in controversy are an extension of the one on Grant avenue to Hancock, and then on Hancock avenue.

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Bluebook (online)
100 A. 379, 130 Md. 297, 1917 Md. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beale-v-town-of-takoma-park-md-1917.