Canton Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore

65 A. 324, 104 Md. 582, 1906 Md. LEXIS 197
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 19, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 65 A. 324 (Canton Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore) 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
Canton Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore, 65 A. 324, 104 Md. 582, 1906 Md. LEXIS 197 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

*583 Jones, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case involves the question as to the use and control of a lot of ground of which the appellant corporation claims the private ownership, and which the appellee, the city of Baltimore, claims to be a part of one of its public streets and as such dedicated to the use of the public. The question was raised in the case by the application of the appellant for an injunction to restrain the appellee from removing a fence which the appellant, in assertion of its ownership of the lot of land in question, had erected thereon so as to cause an obstruction to its use as a public highway.

In its bill for an injunction the appellant alleged that it was the owner in fee of a tract of land in the city of Baltimore lying between a public highway known as Alice Anna street on the north and the Patapsco river on the south, and of all water rights and privileges appurtenant thereto; that for the more convenient use of said land it had laid out and opened upon and over said property a certain road or street, “beginning at and intersecting the south side of Alice Anna street, and running thence southerly at right angles to Alice Anna street with an even width of forty-five feet through and over said land a distance of two hundred and seventy-two feet more or less to said Patapsco river; said road or way forming a continuation through the land” of the appellant “south of Alice Anna street, of a certain street, known as Chester street, which runs into and intersects the north side of Alice Anna street;” and that the said street or road was laid out wholly through the premises of the appellant “and solely for its own convenience” and used and “was graded, paved and curbed” by it “and has always been repaired and maintained at its own cost and expense. ” The bill then alleges the erection by the appellant of the fence already referred to, which it claims to be wholly on its own land and across the bed of the street in controversy, at the point of its intersection with the south side of Alice Anna street and which was erected for the purpose of preventing public ingress and egress to and through its land; and that the authorities of the appellee had given it written *584 notice to remove said fence and had threatened, in case of refusal, to cáuse the same to be removed by the employees of the appellee at the expense of the appellant. It is charged the appellant’s premises “will be seriously and permanently injured by the removal of said fence and the consequent opening” of appellant’s property as threatened. Upon this bill a preliminary injunction was granted.

The appellee answered the bill admitting the notice to the appellant to remove the fence erected as stated in appellant’s bill; and avers that it was the duty of the appellee to cause the said fence to be removed because the street upon which it was erected, and which was described in appellant’s bill, existed as a public street and had so existed for more than twenty years, having been created and dedicated to public use considerably more than twenty years before, and had been accepted as such, by the appellee. This in substance constitutes the appellee’s defense to the appellant’s bill. After replication to the answer there was leave to take testimony and quite a mass of evidence was submitted by the parties in support of their respective contentions.

The question made upon the pleadings, as will be seen, is whether the land embraced in that part of what is known as Chester street in the city of Baltimore, which lies between Alice Anna street and the Patapsco river, as described in the appellant’s bill, is the private property of the appellant and in its use as a road or otherwise subject to the control of the appellant; or whether it exists as a public street or highway and, as such, is subject to the control of the appellee. This is the sole question which the párties to the controversy have made for the Court other than those arising on exceptions to some of the evidence, and its decision depends entirely on the evidence properly in the cause.

The appellee rests its claim to control over the road or street in question first upon an express dedication of the use of. the same to the public as a highway; and secondly upon such dedication of the same arising from user by the public for more than, twenty years in such a way as to establish it as a public *585 street. It appears as alleged in appellant’s bill that the street in question is a continuation of what is known as Chester street which runs north arid south and with this continuation crosses Alice Anna street referred to in the bill and runs to the waters of Patapsco river. That part of Chester street lying to the north of Alice Anna street it is admitted was long since dedicated as a public street; but the question of the express dedication of that part of the said street lying to the south of Alice Anna street is embarrassed by the physical conditions that appear to have existed in the locality thereof after the' northern part of the street was in use as a highway. We shall not find it necessary however to pursue the inquiry as to the express dedication nor to undertake to determine the time of such dedication if any was so made.

It seems to be made reasonably clear from the evidence that the appellee’s claim that the street in question now exists as a public street has been established by user. Just when

the street in controversy came into existence as a continuation of Chester street across and to the south of Alice Anna street does not appear. But whenever it did, it took the exact width of this previously dedicated street and from the time of its formation seems to have been known as Chester street—no distinction having been made, as respects the name, between that and the already existing Chester street to the north of Alice Anna-street. As far back as 1849 it was referred to on the books of the appellant as Chester street. The evidence shows that this continuation of the previously existing street was of much convenience and utility to the public in getting to and from the harbor of Baltimore for various purposes of business, it being the only street between a street known as Wolfe street and the Baltimore County line dividing that county from the city (appellee), a distance of about a mile. The public therefore, would naturally be inclined to avail of opportunity afforded to adopt the street in question as a highway for public use ; and the same reason would induce the appellee to accept it as such. The considerations mentioned may be lacking in any considerable probative force towards establishing prescrip *586 tive title ; but they, at least, may tend to give color to the character of use to which the street was subjected by members of the public. Their tendency may well have been- to induce a general understanding that the street was designed for public use; and this may be supposed to give character to the claim with which its use was availed of with the effect to require a more distinct and palpable denial of the public right than would be requisite in other circumstances to guard against the consequence of the user.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 A. 324, 104 Md. 582, 1906 Md. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canton-co-v-mayor-of-baltimore-md-1906.