Bonebrake v. City of Columbus

6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 41, 18 Ohio Dec. 367, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 57

This text of 6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 41 (Bonebrake v. City of Columbus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bonebrake v. City of Columbus, 6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 41, 18 Ohio Dec. 367, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 57 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Bigger, J.

This ease, together with the case of Irvine v. The City, Vogel v. The City, Pugh v. The City, Krigbaum v. The City, Stevenson, on behalf of heirs and others, v. The City, and Pugh v. The City, were tried together and submitted upon the same evidence.

•The plaintiffs seek- to enjoin the city and its officers and agents from destroying their fences and buildings erected upon their lots, located upon the north side of what is known as G-ustavus lane, in such a way as the city claims to encroach upon the street or alley. The lots in question have their frontage upon Franklin avenue, and this street or alley extends along the rear of the plaintiffs’ lots.

[42]*42Before proceeding to consider the case upon the evidence, I consider first the question of the right of the plaintiffs to file an amended petition in this case to make the petition conform to the evidence offered upon the hearing. This is, of course, a power which in proper cases the court may exercise in furtherance of justice, but as I understand the city’s claim it is that it would be unfair to the city at this time to permit the amendment, which raises for the first time the question as to whether or not this highway is a public street or alley, or as the plaintiffs claim only a private way. As to this claim of the city I observe first that I distinctly recollect that it was said by counsel representing the plaintiffs several times during the course of the trial that they would desire to amend their petition to make it conform to evidence offered, either at that time or after the conclusion of the taking of evidence. I do not know whether the counsel for the city directly consented that this might be done, but they did not object to it. Further, the city itself offered the evidence which the plaintiffs now claim shows that this is not a public street of the city but a private way. The city seems to have assumed upon the trial that, being charged with the destruction of private property, the burden was upon it, when it sought to justify the destruction, to prove as a necessary element of its defense that Gustavus lane was a public street or alley of the city, and I do not see how it can now claim to be prejudiced by the legal conclusions and deductions which may fiow from the consideration of the evidence which it itself offered. The amended petitions will therefore be permitted to be filed to conform to the evidence offered in the case.

The evidence offered upon the trial shows that in 1839 the lots of plaintiffs lying along the north side of ^Gustavus lane were a part of a tract of land belonging to William Miner and others, the said tract of land then being beyond the corporate limits of the city. That in order to effect the partition of a tract of which they were owners in common, a deed was executed to James Bryden of the entire tract, consisting of 113 acres, and James Bryden upon the same day executed deeds to his co-owners for portions of the said land in severalty, reserving a share for [43]*43himself. A plat showing this subdivision of the farm was made, executed and recorded, and is referred to in the deed of the tract to Bryden and by him to the others in severalty. Upon this plat is shown an alley of the width of one and a half rods, and it is recited that it is for the common use of all persons interested now or who may hereafter be interested in any of said divisions or parts thereof, and not to be vacated or the use thereof abridged except by the consent of all such parties interested.

This lane or alley of the width of one rod and a half was excepted from the conveyance of the tract to Bryden. The fee of the land therefore remained in William Miner and his co-owners with an easement granted to the owners of the several divisions of the Bryden farm, and their successors in title, which i'ight and easement was nqt to be abridged except by the consent of all parties interested.

It is plain from the language here used that this was not a dedication of the lane to the use of the public. Before such dedication would become effective, even if it were a dedication to public use, it would be necessary to show an acceptance, and none such is shown. So far as I have been able to discover there was at that time no statute which provided for the subdivision of farm land and the platting and recording of the same. Such platting and recording, therefore, was ineffective as a dedication of the lane to the use of the public. This grant was only the grant of an easement in this strip of land to the owners of the several subdivisions and their successors in title, and if the city has acquired title to this strip of land it must have been in some other way than by this plat of the Bryden farm.

It appears from the evidence in the case that the improvements in the way of fences and outbuildings upon the rear of these lots were erected substantially upon the line of an old fence which had marked the north boundary of this lane for more than twenty-one years before those improvements were erected. In 1886 the land in which these lots are situated, and being lot three of the Bryden subdivision, became the property of Deshler and Sinks, who subdivided the same into city lots, [44]*44the land being then within the corporate limits. A plat was made and recorded and the city accepted the same as an addition to the city and a dedication of the streets shown thereon, which had not been before dedicated.

This plat shows Gustavus lane or Parsons lane along the south line of the addition, and it is shown upon the plat as 24.75 feet in width, the full width of the alley reserved in the deed to Bryden. But this manifestly could not be a dedication of these lots to public use, for Deshler and Sinks only obtained the title which their grantor had, and that did not include Gustavus lane, which was reserved from the original grant to Bryden. The city, therefore, could not accept what the grantors had no right or title to give. The fee of the streets in Ohio cities is in the city. But the fee in this street was never conveyed to Deshler and Sinks, and they could not, therefore, convey it to the city of Columbus.

The city seems to state in its argument, and that is I think the fact as it is in accord with the evidence and what would naturally be expected, that the property owners in building upon these lots should put their fences upon the line of the old fence which had for many years marked the south boundary line of this Deshler and Sinks subdivision to the north line of Gustavus lane.

But it is claimed that this fence was an encroachment upon the way as originally granted, of twenty-four and three-fourths' feet in width. That to the extent of the encroachment by the owner of lot three of the Bryden farm subdivision such owner acquired title to the same by adverse possession for more than twenty-one years as against the others who were interested therein. There is a serious question as to whether one co-owner can so acquire title as against his co-owners. Granting that the plat of Deshler and Sinks shows an intention upon their part to dedicate to public use this alley or lane to whatever extent they had an interest in it, how does it help the city is case? All they had to grant was a strip something like three feet in width. The showing that Gustavus lane is an alley or strip twenty-four ajad three-fourths feet wide would no more affect that [45]

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6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 41, 18 Ohio Dec. 367, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonebrake-v-city-of-columbus-ohctcomplfrankl-1907.