Burchfield v. Town of Ruleville

111 So. 565, 146 Miss. 570, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 194
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1927
DocketNo. 26274.
StatusPublished

This text of 111 So. 565 (Burchfield v. Town of Ruleville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burchfield v. Town of Ruleville, 111 So. 565, 146 Miss. 570, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 194 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

*576 McGtoweN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants, complainants in the court below, exhibited their bill in the chancery court of Sunflower county asserting title in themselves to a certain small block of land situated in the town of Ruleville, and described on all the maps of said town as ‘£ Ciaty Square, ’ ’ asserting that the block of land had been dedicated by Mrs. M. J. Rule (through whom they claimed to derive title) to the county of Sunflower for the erection of a courthouse; that the purpose of the dedication had failed, and that the land which their ancestor, Mrs. M. J. Rule, had intended to dedicate reverted to them because of the permanent failure of the purpose for which the land was dedicated.

The bill prayed for the cancellation of the maps or plats, and for the investiture of the title in the complainants as the real true owners of the block of land.

The county of Sunflower was made a party. It admitted that the complainants were the heirs of Mrs. Mary Jane Rule, and successors in title; admitted that the map had been executed; admitted that no hope was entertained for the erection of a courthouse thereon; and made their answer a cross-bill for taxes on the lot if the title was adjudged to be in the complainants.

The town of Ruleville in their answer admitted that Mrs. Mary Jane Rule, prior to her death, was the owner in fee of the land in controversy. They charged that the map filed as Exhibit A, platted and acknowledged by Mrs. M. J. .Rule in her lifetime, was a true and correct map or plat; also set up conveyances according to the map platted by Mrs. M. J. Rule prior to her death; set up that the lot had been dedicated to the municipality of Ruleville; and that the platting of the town, the filing of the map, and the execution of deeds by Mrs. M. J. *577 Rule according to said map, and the making* of deeds after her death by her heirs at law, together with the acceptance by the town of various acts of ownership constituted a dedication according* to the statute — a dedication according to the common law and a dedication by estoppel.

The facts here stated are such as we deem necessary to an understanding of the points decided.

On the 31st day of May, 1898, a map or plat of “Buie ville, Sunflower county, Miss.,” was filed with the chancery clerk, and by him received as a proper map or plat of said town. Said map or plat contains the signature of Mrs. M. J. Rule as proprietor as to the correctness, showing the section, township, and rang’e of the lands platted, certificate of the justice of the peace taking the acknowledgment of the proprietor and the surveyor, and also the certificate of the chancery clerk of the correctness of the map of the proposed town. In brief, the map disclosed about one hundred lots east of the Yazoo Delta Railroad fronting on said railroad, beginning with Front avenue, next east Ruby avenue, next Chester avenue, and next Shaw avenue. Then, beginning on the north, there were Harrison, Church, Floric, and Gladys streets. The land was divided into blocks subdivided into lots, and the lots were numbered. On the west side of the proposed town, practically in the middle between two blocks, the lot of land in controversy here is shown as a lot three hundred feet by three hundred feet, and is marked in large, plain letters “City Square.”

When this survey was made, and this plat or map filed, it was of a part of an old field belonging to Mrs. Mary Jane Rule.

In the following year after the death of Mrs. M. J. Rule, there was filed what is called an amendment to the map or plat by J. H. Rule, attorney in fact for the heirs at law of Mrs. M. J. Rule. The only amendment worthy of notice, so far as the lots, streets, blocks, etc., are concerned, is the size of the lot designated “City Square, ’ ’ which lot is reduced fifty feet on the side next *578 to the railroad. This amended map or plat was filed and recorded on June 10, 1899.

The village of Euleville was incorporated as a municipality on the 2'3'd of September, 1899, many months after the M. J. Kule map had been platted and received for filing by the chancery clerk of that county. In her lifetime Mrs. M. J. Eule conveyed lot 24, black 3, lots 3 and 4, block 8, and lots 13 and 14, block 4, according to said recorded map.

In 1905, by proclamation duly made, the village of Eule-ville was elevated to the rank of a town. In 1907, the town of Euleville, having grown much larger than the town originally laid out by Mrs. Eule, had a map made, including additions, but strictly copying and adopting the original map as platted by Mrs. M. J. Eule, except as to the size of the city square lot here in controversy. And. later another map was made, there being at least four maps, all of which show this plat of ground as “City Square.”

In 1903 the heirs at law of Mrs. Mary Jane Eule had a partition suit in which all the other lots unsold were embraced. It was the apparent effort of the parties to partition all the lands they held in that vicinity, and no reference was made to this city square lot.

It was shown that at one time the town had fenced this square, and at another time rented it; that some trees had been planted out; that the public had access to it; and that it was used for public speakings about like parks are usually used in the average Mississippi town of the size and population of Euleville.

Complainants showed that it was understood and talked in the family that Mrs. Eule intended for a courthouse to be built on this lot. They also showed that the leaders of the county in politics and otherwise had decided that there could be no courthouse erected on this lot; that the idea of establishing a courthouse at Euleville had been abandoned.

*579 The chancellor, having heard the facts, entered a decree for the town of Bnleville dismissing the bill, and the complainants appeal there.

There are two propositions submitted to ns for reversal :

First. The plat or map filed by Mrs.' M. J. Bule on the 31st day of May, 1898, designating this lot as “City Square,” did not conform to section 2937 of the Code of 1892, which Code was in effect at the time this plat or map was filed, in that there was no correct abstract of title of the land platted filed with the board of mayor and aldermen, and approved by them.

The answer is clear and patent .that one- desiring to plat land, and file a map thereof, proposing to create a town site, could not file a m'ap or plat and abstract of title with the board of mayor or aldermen of a municipality which only existed as a dream or in the desire and imagination of the proprietor of the land. And this section of the Code does not apply to a proposed town site where there is no corporate existence at the time the plat is made and the map filed.

This map or plat was made, filed, and recorded in substantial conformity to section 4399 and section 4402 of the Code of 1892; and, in our opinion, constitutes a complete statutory dedication of the lot marked “City Square,” as well as the streets mentioned and alleys shown, to the public use.

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Bluebook (online)
111 So. 565, 146 Miss. 570, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burchfield-v-town-of-ruleville-miss-1927.