Board of Com'rs v. Young

59 F. 96, 9 Ohio F. Dec. 202, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2336
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 26, 1893
DocketNo. 89
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 59 F. 96 (Board of Com'rs v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Com'rs v. Young, 59 F. 96, 9 Ohio F. Dec. 202, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2336 (6th Cir. 1893).

Opinion

LURTON, Circuit Judge,

(after stating the facts.) We quite agree, upon the facts of this record, that the plaintiff’s title is good, and that he is entitled to recover, if the case is to turn alone upon the effect of the common-law dedication made by John Young in 1802. The dedication under the unacknowledged plat of that year was good only as a common-law dedication. The plat was only evidence of the purpose of the dedicator with regard to lots 95 and 96. The acceptance and use by the public of them as a burying ground, taken in connection with the plat, operated as a dedication for burying purposes. This sort of dedication operated only by estoppel. The acquiescence of the owner, and that use by the public, estopped him from asserting any right of possession hostile to such use. The public acquired an easement for that purpose, and that only. This seems to he the well-settled ground upon which a common-law dedication becomes operative and effective. Fulton v. Mehrenfield, 8 Ohio St. 440; Wisby v. Bonte, 19 Ohio St. 238. The right of the public being a mere easement, the owner of the fee may resume possession whenever there has been a full and lawful abandonment of the use for which, the dedication was made. The estoppel ceases to operate when the use ceases. “The dedication,” as forcibly put by the circuit judge, “has spent its force” whenever the use becomes impossible. This is the well-settled rule concerning public roads, streets, and alleys, when the fee remains in the owner of land over which a public road has been established. Barclay v. Howell’s Lessee, 6 Pet. 498.

The result would be the same under the construction placed upon the Ohio acts of December 6, 1800, and March 3, 1833, by the court of that state. The acts referred to provide that the due acknowledgment and proper registration of a town plat “should he deemed a sufficient conveyance to vest, the fee of such parcels of ground as are therein expressly named and intended to be for public uses in the county in which such town lies, in trust to and for the uses and purposes therein named, expressed or intended, and for no other uses or purposes whatever.” Under this statute the Ohio court held this statutory title and dedication conferred “no power of alienation discharged of the use by which the purpose of the dedication might be defeated,” and that, “should the sole uses to which the property has been dedicated become impossible of execution, the property [100]*100would revert to the dedicators or their representatives.” Board of Education v. Edson, 18 Ohio St. 226. The case of Zinc Co. v. City of La Salle, 117 Ill. 411, 8 N. E. 81, was under a like statute, and is in accord with the Ohio case. It follows, under the law of Ohio, that whether the fee be in the dedicator, or be in the town or county, by virtue of the statute concerning properly registered town plats, the dedicator, or his heirs, may repossess himself whenever it is no longer possible to use the property for the purposes indicated by the dedication, or whenever there has been a full and lawful abandonment of the easement by the beneficiaries. The lawful and effectual abandonment of these lots as a burying ground would therefore operate to restore the owner to his right of possession by the termination of the easement.

The case of Campbell v. City of Kansas, 102 Mo. 326, 13 S. W. 897, goes to this extent, and no further. The parcel of land involved in that snit had been marked upon a town plat as donated for burying purposes. The city council afterwards, by ordinance, caused the bodies there buried to be removed, and converted the plot into a public park. The plat was never properly acknowledged or registered, and the title therefore remained in the dedicator. The heirs of the original owner sued in ejectment, and recovered; the Missouri court holding that the public had only an easement for burial purposes, and that the lawful abandonment of this easement revested the dedicator with the right of possession. It was not a case of an estate upon condition, but a case of a mere easement for a specified use.

This brings us to a consideration of the effect of the deed made in 1868 by the plaintiff to the village of Youngstown. Is this deed equivalent only to a statutory dedication? Is it a grant subject to be defeated by any subsequent event? To entitle the plaintiff to recover, he must show that the estate conveyed by him has terminated, and that he now is entitled to re-enter. The construction put upon this deed by the circuit judge was governed by his view of the act of 1867, and, by treating it as a part of the deed, he thought that that act only undertook “to confer upon the village the power and control over the burying ground which the public would have in such grounds, dedicated for burial purposes, at common law;” that it fixed “the trustee to preserve the rights of the public in a common-law dedication;” and that “the authority and control of the council is limited by the act to the preservation of such rights, and, by reading the act into the deed, the same limitation upon the fee therein conveyed is created.” The result of this construction of the act of 1867, when read into the deed, he sums up in his conclusion thus: “The effect of the deed here was to put the parties in exactly the same situation that they would have been in had the dedication of John Young, in 1802, been in accordance with the statute then in force.” This is a strong position. Its error seems to lie in confounding the distinction between the effect of a grant by deed for a public use and a common-law or statutory dedication for a like purpose. To say that, by reading the act of 1867 into the deed, the effect is to cut: it down into aD instrument operating only as if the [101]*101grantees held under a statutory or common-law dedication, is to assume the whole point in controversy.

We shall not antagonize; the soundness of the construction put on the act of 1867. If it had been possible, by retrospective legislation, to divest a legal title out of one and vest it in another, the result, after all, would have been hut a statutory dedication. Under the Edson Base, such a dedication, though operating to pass the title for the uses and purposes specified in the instrument, would terminate when the use became impossible. That case may he treated as recognizing no distinction between the duration of a common-law dedication and a statutory dedication operating to pass the legal title. The well-settled distinction between a grant by deed and a dedication for a particular use is not touched upon in the Edson Base. Subsequently, the same court, in Taylor v. Binford, 37 Ohio St. 262, expressly treated the question as undecided, and reserved its consideration. The circuit judge, whose opinion we are now considering, clearly recognized ibis distinction, and undertook to take this <;ase without the rule affecting grants by deed.

On this subject he said:

“Counsel for tic; defendants contend that there is a distinction between a grant by deed and a dedication for a particular or specific use, and that a condition subsequent cannot be (Tented in a deed by limiting the use, unless there be a clause of re-entry for forfeiture; and several strong eases are cited to sustain the claim with respect to a deed. Raley v. Umatilla Co., 15 Or. 180, 13 Pac. 890; Packard v. Ames, 16 Gray, 327; Ayer v. Emery, 14 Allen, 67; Brown v. Caldwell, 23 W. Va. 187; First M. E. Church of Columbia v. Old Columbia Public Ground Co., 103 Pa. St. 608. In Taylor v. Binford, 37 Ohio St. 262, the supreme court of Ohio declined to decide whether the law of Ohio was in accordance with these authorities, and ttia question is an open one in this state.

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59 F. 96, 9 Ohio F. Dec. 202, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-comrs-v-young-ca6-1893.