Central Land Company v. Central City

300 S.W. 362, 222 Ky. 103, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 884
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 28, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 300 S.W. 362 (Central Land Company v. Central City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Land Company v. Central City, 300 S.W. 362, 222 Ky. 103, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 884 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion op the 'Court by

Turner, Commissioner

Affirming.

This is an equitable action by appellants against the city of Central City, wherein the plaintiff asserts title to a small plot of land within the city, and seeks to enjoin *104 the municipality from going upon and improving1 the lot as a city street.

The answer denies plaintiff’s ownership, and in addition relies upon an oral dedication by the plaintiff’s predecessor in title made many years ago, and upon an estoppel alleged to grow out of the fact that plaintiff’s predecessor in title had many years ago opened up a street over the land in question in preparation for a sale of lots, and the platting of the property owned by plaintiff’s said predecessor just outside of the city limits of the city, and upon the continued and exclusive use by the public of the lot as a street for a long period of years. It is asserted that about the time of the platting the city limits of the city were extended and the land in controversy together with other property owned by plaintiff’s predecessor taken into and included in the city limits, and that the city had thereafter, for 20 years or more before the filing of this suit, gone upon the lot in question and graded and otherwise improved it as a street of the city, whereby it had accepted the dedication so alleged to have been made.

The reply puts in issue the essential facts with reference to the dedication and acceptance, and affirmatively says that while :some use had been made of a portion of the plot of ground described for travel by the public, such use was merely permissive, and that plaintiff at all times owned and claimed the parcel of land, and only permitted certain members of the public to use the same for a passway to a limited extent, with the understanding that the use was only permissive and temporary, and until such time as the city had an opportunity to straighten North Second street at its intersection with the South 'Carrollton road. The reply then affirmatively pleads that the plaintiff and its predecessor in title had during all the years named been required by the city to list and assess said plot of ground for taxation for city and school purposes, and required the plaintiff to pay taxes thereon during each of those years, whereby the city had recognized its ownership, and is now estopped to deny the same.

The affirmative allegations in the reply were controverted on the record; and thereafter the defendant tendered and offered to file an amendment alleging, in substance, that the city had by the enactment of an ordinance, general in its terms, on the 3d of May, 1921, ac *105 cepted the plot of ground as a street of the city, together with other plots or tracts, of land similarly situated within the city, and then alleges that for a longer period than five years prior to the 3d of May, 1921, the tract of land in question had been used as a public street within the city, and had been 'Opened to the unrestricted use of the general public for five consecutive years prior thereto, .and had during such time been continuously and adversely used by the public as a street of the city.

There appears no order of court filing the amendment, but, after the taking of much evidence, the cause was submitted, and the chancellor dismissed the plaintiff’s petition.

The facts disclosed are that, about the year 1900 and prior thereto, appellant’s predecessor in title, the Central Coal & Iron Company, owned a considerable tract of land just outside the then city limits and northwest of the Greenville and South Carrollton road; that the general territory so designated was at the time only sparsely .settled, (but about that time the Central Coal & Iron Company had it platted, designating certain streets and dividing the abutting property on those streets into' lots. Among such streets were North Second and North Third streets, each of which it was designed should intersect the South Carrollton road at such points as would connect on the other side of that road with North Second and North Third streets. It so happened, however, that to make North Second street straight so as to intersect the South Carrollton road at the proper point it would be necessary for the Central 'Coal & Iron Company to buy certain property which it did not own and upon which ■there were some improvements, and thereby put that -company to considerable expense in making the intersection at the point originally intended. Obviously to avoid the expense of acquiring the property so owned by others necessary to make the intersection with the South Carrollton road at that point, the Central 'Coal & Iron Company directed its officials to open the lot which it did own further north on the South ’Carrollton road so as to inter•sect with the North Second street on its plat, and offer an •opening from the northern part of North Second street through that lot to the South Carrollton road at a point not originally designated oii the plat for that purpose. 'The opening was¡ made at the point indicated, and consists of the tract of land in controversy. And, while there *106 was no formal acceptance by the city of that opening as a street until 1921, it was acquiesced in, and the city for a period of <20 or 25 years graded, made walks upon, permited sewers to be built over,.and otherwise treated that property as a street, of the city. During that period the public had the unrestricted use of, and apparently claimed the right to use, and did use, that lot as an opening to North Second street and the territory beyond it, not only within the city, but as an outlet to a considerable portion of the country outside of the city. As we understand the evidence, that property was so in use by the public, and had been graded and otherwise improved at the time appellant is alleged to have acquired its title. About the time this part of that street was opened by the Central Coal & Iron Company in lieu of the originally intended extension of that street so as to intersect the South Car-' rollton road, the city took into the city limits all of that territory, and thereafter made all of the improvements referred to upon the lot in question as a part of North Second street. ■ • •

The first question is whether the acts of the Central Coal &Tron Company, without any written dedication, are- equivalent to an oral dedication; and then whether the unrestricted use by the citizens and the improvements by the city w'ere equivalent' to an acceptance of such oral dedication iby the city.

The circumstances in evidence clearly- indicate that it was 'important if not essential to the successful sale of a plortión of the plotted subdivision that there •should be an opening from 'the tipper end of North Second street to the South Carrollton r'oad,'and, as the Central Coal & Iron Company''did not itself own a part of the property necessary to make that extension as originally intended, and could not make it without the expenditure of considerable money, it utilized its own lot which was of much less value than the cost would have' been in acquiring the property it did not own, and thereby furnished to prospective purchasers -in that part of its .subdivision assurance that they would have an outlet to the South Carroll-ton road.

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Related

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398 S.W.2d 874 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1966)
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9 S.W.2d 1015 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
300 S.W. 362, 222 Ky. 103, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-land-company-v-central-city-kyctapphigh-1927.