Chatfield v. City of Cincinnati

1 Hosea's Rep. 44
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedJuly 1, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Hosea's Rep. 44 (Chatfield v. City of Cincinnati) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chatfield v. City of Cincinnati, 1 Hosea's Rep. 44 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Hosea, J.

Plaintiff avers ownership and possession of fifty-two feet, more or less, on Saunders street, Cincinnati, extending northward to Estelle street, and improved by a dwelling-house. He claims that the city has entered upon his said lot and constructed and maintains a public stairway and plank walk thereon between Estelle and Saunders streets to his irreparable injury, and prays a perpetual injunction.

[45]*45The city by answer claims 23 feet of the east 25 feet of said premises through dedication by plaintiff’s predecessors in title; and issue is taken by a general reply.

Waiving the obvious criticism upon the form of the action, and the allegations of the petition, the questions will be considered as though properly pleaded and as upon issues properly raised, in view of their public importance.

Without going into unnecessary prolixity of detail, it appears that plaintiff derives title to the premises — described in his petition as a lot “52 feet more or less on Saunders street” — through two deeds, namely:

(1) January 24, 1900, from O’Hara, assignee of F. G. Huntington, to land described by metes and bounds “commencing at the northwest corner of Saunders and Sycamore streets,” etc., “being the east part of lot No. 82 and the south part of lot No. 81 of Wm. C. Huntington’s subdivision” — elsewhere referred to by its record in Hamilton county records.

(2) December 30, 1901, a release and quit-claim to a strip described by metes and bounds beginning on Saunders street, at the southeast corner of lot No. 82 of the W. C. Huntington subdivision, extending twenty-five feet east on Saunders street to southwest corner lot ten of the subdivision of Frederick G. and Frank Huntington, and extending back to Estelle street one hundred and forty feet, and containing the following further reference:

“Being the same property which is sometimes referred to on the records of said county as part of Lewis (also called Sycamore) street, and which was expressly excepted by said William C. Huntington from dedication, and reserved to himself in his said plat,” etc.

By stipulation of counsel, it is admitted that the said strip of 23 (of the 25) feet has not been on the tax duplicate or taxed since 1884; and that the dwelling on lot 82 encroaches two inches in front and six and seven-eighths inches in rear upon the twenty-three feet constituting Lewis (or Sycamore) street; and it appears in testimony that [46]*46said dwelling was built in about 1883 by Fred. G. Huntington, and that its east wall was built with a dozen windows opening upon the strip called Lewis (or Sycamore) street.

It thus appears, contrary to the inferences of the petition,, that the improvements upon the property were not placed upon the lands described therein as a whole, nor with reference to their condition as an entire tract, but distinctly upon a specified portion only and bounding upon a platted street, which street is the subject of controversy here; and these facts are made plain in the deeds whereby plaintiff acquired title.

The testimony of the records upon the question at issue is as follows:

(a) As early as 1828 a plat was recorded in Deed Book 29, page 17, of a subdivision of part of the estate of Thomas Hughes, lying north of the corporation line of Cincinnati, made by trustees and legatees under the will of said Hughes, deceased, and approved by the city surveyor. This plat (Exhibit 1) shows lots bounded on Main street'on the west and Sycamore street on the east, as extended northwardly; and refers to said streets in its descriptions.

(b) In 1836 (Deed Book 62, page 39) is recorded a perpetual leasehold, by the trustees of Thomas B. Hughes, deceased, to Eden B. Reeder, of property including that last above noted, and more particularly described by boundaries, the eastern boundary described being: “land now owned by Lloyd JVayne, and a road or street being an extension of Sycamore street,” etc. By the terms of this indenture it was provided that said Reeder, his heirs and assigns were to have the privilege of “subdividing said property into lots, opening streets and alleys, and dedicating the same for public use,” etc. (Exhibit 9.)

(c) Later in 1836 (Deed Book 62, page 41) appears an assignment of the “lease and the premises contained” by Reeder to McCleany and Bissell, with certain reservations bounding on Sycamore street extended,” and others “on said Reeder’s continuation of Sycamore street”; and all [47]*47“subject likewise to the streets and alleys dedicated to public uses by said Reeder in his subdivision of the premises,” etc.

(d) The plat of Reeder’s subdivision, referred to in the preceding item (c) was put on record Feb. 3, 1838 (Deed Book 65, pages 374-5). This plat covers various tracts derived from the Hughes estate and extends Sycamore street northward, with the following remarks:

“In extending Sycamore street northward to the end of the premises a strip of two feet in width is reserved between that extension and the east line of the premises, until the owner or owners of the property adjoining shall lay out an addition of twenty-five feet in width so as to make a fifty-foot street for such parts on the whole length as shall be so added and laid out,” etc.

Also: “The streets, alleys and avenues are set apart and dedicated as a right of way for public use forever,” reserving a right of alteration for ten years where no sales shall have been made. This plat was signed and duly acknowledged by Eden B. Reeder before John Burgoyne, associate Judge in and for Hamilton County, Ohio, on February 4, 1838.

(e) Next appears in 1841 (Deed Book 82, pages 419-20), a plat and accompanying, description of Greenbury Dorsey’s division made by Salmon P. Chase, his trustee, and confirmed and ratified by G. Dorsey by C. Byrne, attorney in fact (his power also being recorded, Mortgage Book 83, page 73).

This plat covers the same property shown in Reeder’s subdivision (item d) and differs in detail chiefly with regard to certain new cross-streets laid out from Sycamore street west, but makes no change whatever as to Sycamore or Lewis street. Eden B. Reeder also endorses on said plat his acceptance and confirmation of the same by virtue of his reserved right of alteration before referred to. The plat is also endorsed as accepted by certain intervening purchasers.

[48]*48(f) Next is presented a'conveyance in fee simple, dated May, 1867 (Deed Book 344; page 96), from the surviving heirs of John D. Saunders, deceased, to W. C. Huntington, of lots D, E, F, G, H and I, of lots on the Dorsey plat as made by S. P. Chase, trustee” (item e, ante), “subject to the conditions of a lease by Chase to the ancestors of these grantors and of the lease made by the trustees of Thomas Hughes to Eden B. Reeder” (item b, ante).

(g) Next in order is a deed of release and quit-claim dated January 23, 1875, from the trustees of Thomas Hughes, to certain lands, among others that described as bounded on the west by Locust street, north by Mason street, east by lands of Holden, Thoms, Smith and Huntington, south by Saunders street: “said lot being shown as D, E, F, PI and I, Dorsey Blue Plat, Hamilton County, Auditor’s office.”

(This, as will be seen, is the same property covered by item f, ante, the omission of lot “G," being doubtless a clerical error in the copy in evidence.)

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1 Hosea's Rep. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chatfield-v-city-of-cincinnati-ohsuperctcinci-1907.