Boughner v. Town of Clarksburg

15 W. Va. 394, 1879 W. Va. LEXIS 33
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 15 W. Va. 394 (Boughner v. Town of Clarksburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boughner v. Town of Clarksburg, 15 W. Va. 394, 1879 W. Va. LEXIS 33 (W. Va. 1879).

Opinion

Moore, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The first question presented in this case is : Had the court jurisdiction to restrain the Town of Clarksburg by [399]*399injunction from constructing the pavement? The ap-pellees insist that injunction was not the proper remedy but that the plaintiff should seek redress by action at law. The doctrine has been settled in this State, by case of Pierpoint v. The Town of Harrisville, 9 W. Va. 215, that “ an injunction will lie to restrain a town, from opening streetsthrough a person’s land, without first condemning it according to law, when there has been no dedication of such streets to public use.” because the redress at law is utterly inadequate. Upon the same principles, courts of equity will restrain by injunction a town from constructing pavements on a person’s land where he has not dedicated the ground to public use, or Syllabus 1. where the ground has not been condemned according to law, for that purpose.

It is insisted by the appellees that in this case the plaintiff dedicated the ground, on which the pavement is proposed to be laid, to the public.

The doctrine is also established, in this State, by the case of Pierpoint v. The Town of Harrisville, that, “ "Where there has been no public use of a street, the owner may dedicate his land to the public for such use by acts and deelar-ations, without a deed. But in such a case, these acts and declarations must be deliberate, unequivocal, and decided, manifesting a positive, and unmistakable intention to permanently abandon his property to such public use.”

Under the same principles the owner of lands may dedicate or set apart to the public use for a pavement Syllal)»s2-such part of his lands as he pleases to do, and if the dedication be accepted, it will work an estoppel in pais, precluding the owner from asserting any right inconsistent with such use. But, as stated in Holdane v. Trustees of Village of Cold Spring, 21 N. Y. 477, and cited by Judge Green in Pierpoint v. Town of Harrisville, “ the dedication and acceptance are to be proved, or disproved, by acts of the owner. Both are questions of intention.”

Was it the intention of the plaintiff to dedicate the ground as is alleged in the answer ? Turning to the acts [400]*400and declarations of the plaintiff to prove that he intended such dedication, the appellees point to Exhibit A. filed with their answer, which is as follows:

Clarksburg, W. Va., April -12, 1872.
“ To the Mayor and Town Council of Clarksburg :
“ Gentlemen : With the intention of building upon our lot on the northwest coraer of Main and Fourth streets, we hereby apply for an official establishment of the grades for sidewalks on both streets ; also for an indication of street lines. We also ask for the usual privileges of builders upon the streets.
“ Very respectfully,
“D. Boughner & Son.”

It also appears from an authenticated copy of the minutes of the town council of Clarksburg for April 12, 1872, that “ D. Boughner & Son made application in writing for permission to erect a brick building on the northwest corner of Main and Fourth streets; also to have the grade of the street established. Was granted.”

Werninger testifies that he was mayor of Clarksburg at the time the aforesaid application was made by D. Boughner & Son.

To the defendants question. — “ Who was the - street commissioner at the time said application was made, and what action, if any, was taken in reference to fixing the grades of sidewalks on said streets, and the indication of such street lines ?

“ Answered — William B.. Alexander was the street commissioner. I know that on Main street there was action taken to fix the lines; I assisted William B>. Alexander, as the street commissioner, in doing it; it was done at the time that we graded Main street, near the mouth of Fifth street. I think I had a conversation with Mr. - Boughner a time or two during the time Mr. Alexander was at work on said street. Whilst at work at it, I became satisfied that Mr. Boughner and all the lot owners on the north side of Main street from [401]*401Fourth west were on the street; that their fences were out on the street. In a conversation I had with Thorn, I told him that I was satisfied- he was four or four and one-half feet on the street, and by a true measurement, was more. I suggested to him that he had better throw his fence back about six feet, and that if we were wrong, he had his remedy; that he could go for damages if they had done anything wrong. He said that if we would move his fence back at our own expense on the line suggested, there was an end of it; that he would charge no damages; and we did so; the corporation put up the fence. I do not -recollect as to Mr. Goff’s with certainty, but my impression is, that he moved back. At all events it was moved back, and the corporation ma)*- have done it; so far as Mr. Boughner was concerned, I think the most of his fence was torn down. It -was a place for hitching horses, and I think it was mostly torn down. There was dirt hauled there to grade the sidewalks, as near as we could with the naked eye. I think Mr. Alexander hauled some dirt inside the lot. This was before the erection of the brick building that now stands on the lot.
“ Question by same — State if you please whether the brick building erected on said lot stands on Main street in conformity with or about on the line indicated by you and Mr. Alexander, as you have stated.
“ Answer — That part of brick building fronting on Main street is as near on the line as I can tell; I have thought that it probably was a little over the line at the western corner.
ON CROSS-EXAMINATION.
“Question by plaintiff’s counsel — At the time spoken' of, when you attempted to indicate street lines and fix the grade of pavement, did you have the lines of the lot-on the north side of Main street run by a surveyor ?
Answer — No sir: It was generally understood that those buildings on the street from Despard’s corner up to frame buildings east of Dolan’s were on the true line, [402]*402and we took it from that. T was here at. the time these frame buildings were put up, now occupied by Mr. Jas. P. Davis: I knew that the man who put up that frame building put it as near on the true line as he could get it, for I was interested in it. It was put up, I think in about 1832.
Question by same — In indicating the street line west of Fourth street, did you do it by merely looking at a building or buildings between Third and Fourth?
Answer — So far as I did it, I endeavored to get the line by sighting along the buildings from the Third street up to this frame building occupied by Jas. P. Davis ; there was no other means taken at that time to fix the line.
“ Question by same — Was any change made at that time or since, to your knowledge, in the lines of lots west of the property then owned by Thorn ? If so, what were they ?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 W. Va. 394, 1879 W. Va. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boughner-v-town-of-clarksburg-wva-1879.