Chattaway v. City of New London

51 A.2d 917, 133 Conn. 377, 1947 Conn. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 11, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 51 A.2d 917 (Chattaway v. City of New London) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chattaway v. City of New London, 51 A.2d 917, 133 Conn. 377, 1947 Conn. LEXIS 108 (Colo. 1947).

Opinion

Dickenson, J.

This is an action for a declaratory judgment determining whether the fee in certain land is in the defendant for street purposes and whether it has the duty to open the land for travel or use. The plaintiffs have appealed from a judgment for the defendant. Their claim, in substance, is that they have dedicated their land for street *379 purposes in compliance -with the requirements of the defendant’s charter and that the dedication was accepted by the defendant city, which now refuses to develop the streets.

With such corrections of the finding as the plaintiffs are entitled to, the facts are as follows: The defendant is a municipal corporation of the state of Connecticut. The plaintiffs are the owners of land located in the city and described on a map entitled “ 'Biggs Estate’ Bevised Plan of Sub-division for Dr. E. O. Winship, New London, Conn., 1929,” and recorded in the town clerk’s office in New London. In 1929 Winship owned land located in the southern part of the city of New London and known as the Biggs estate. lie undertook to develop this by dividing it into building lots and streets and by conveying the latter to the defendant city. The plaintiffs are successors in title to Winship as to the lots owned by them in the development.

Section 93 of the charter of the city of New London (18 Spec. Laws 739), under the head of “City Planning Board,” reads in part as follows: “Any proprietor of lots or grounds within the city, who subdivides or lays them out for sale, shall cause to be made an accurate map or plat of such subdivision describing with certainty all grounds laid out or granted for streets ... or other public uses .... Such map or plat shall be described by the proprietor ... in writing, acknowledged before an officer authorized to take acknowledgment of deeds, who shall certify the acknowledgment of the instrument, and be recorded in the office of the town clerk. The map or plat so recorded shall thereupon be sufficient conveyance to vest in the city, when accepted by the city, the fee or easement for street *380 purposes in the parcel or parcels of land designated or intended for streets ... or other public uses, to be held in the corporate name in trust to and for the uses and purposes in the instrument set forth, expressed, designated or intended.”

Section 94 of the charter (18 Spec. Laws 740) reads in part as follows: “The council shall by ordinance provide regulations governing the platting of all lands so as to require all streets and alleys to be of proper width, grade and location . . . and otherwise to conform with the regulations as to the plan of the city .... When any person plats any land within the corporate limits of the city, as hereinbefore provided, the platting officer shall, if such plats are in accordance with the rules prescribed by the council, endorse his written approval thereon. No plat subdividing lands within the corporate limits shall be entitled to record in the office of the town clerk without such written approval endorsed thereon.” Section 95 of the charter (18 Spec. Laws 740) reads in part as follows: “No streets or alleys . . . except those laid down on a plat bearing the approval of the platting officer as herein-before provided, shall subsequently in any way be accepted as public streets, alleys . . . nor shall any public funds be expended in the repair of improvement of any such street, alley . . . laid out and not on such plat.”

At the time Winship subdivided his property there was in effect in the city of New London an ordinance, adopted February 19, 1923, which reads in part as follows: “1. No street, alley, way or walk for public use shall be laid out, constructed or opened for travel or use, except by and with the express consent of the Council of the City of New Lon *381 don; nor unless the grade, lay-out, location and width of the same have been approved by vote of the Council of the City. 2. No street for public use shall be laid out, constructed or opened for travel, unless the same be at least three rods in width and curbs have been laid to the satisfaction of the Council. ... 9. No plat shall be approved by the City Engineer unless the same is in accordance with the foregoing rules and with the provisions of this ordinance, nor until the lay-out of the streets, alleys, ways, walks, parks and lots shown on said plan have been approved by the Council, nor until the City Engineer shall have endorsed his written approval on said plan; nor until proper deeds of conveyance fully executed, conveying title, to said streets, alleys, wTays, walks, parks and other land for public use shall have been delivered to the City by the person or persons platting said land, or in any way interested therein, and approved by the Council and the Director of Law. Said deed shall be accompanied by a waiver of all claims for damages occasioned by the establishment of grades as approved and the present or future alteration of the surface of any portion of streets, alleys, ways and walks, conveyed to conform to the grade so established. The fee for filing such map or plat shall be paid by the person platting such land. 10. No street or way laid out or opened except in compliance with the provisions of this ordinance shall become a public highway, nor shall any improvement or repairs be made thereon by said City . . . .”

On November 5, 1929, Winship filed in the New London town clerk’s office a map which fully complied with all the requirements of § 93 of the charter and with the provisions of the ordinance in so far *382 as they related to such maps. The map showed the Riggs estate divided into lots and three proposed streets designated as Riggs Place, Danby Road and Winship Place, and on profiles showed the existing grade and the proposed grade of those streets. The map also had on it the indorsement of the city engineer, who under the charter was also the chief engineer of the planning board and the platting officer, in these words: “Approved for street grades and property layout.” It also had on it a legend, “Approved by the planning board, Oct. 30th, 1929,” signed by the secretary of the board. In addition, Winship executed and had recorded a warranty deed, dated November 4, 1929, conveying to the city “for public use for the purposes of public highways” the three strips of land in question. The deed contained the provision that in accordance with an ordinance of the city of New London the grantor waived all claims for damages occasioned by the establishment of grades and the present and future alteration of the surface of the streets to conform to the grade so established. It was “approved as to form and correctness” by the city’s then director of law.

At a meeting of the city council on November 4, 1929,.a communication was received from the planning board stating that it had approved the revised plan of the subdivision of the Riggs estate with the profile of the proposed streets, Riggs Place, Danby Road and Winship Place, and recommending to the council the acceptance of the plan “when the requirements of an Ordinance Relative to the Layout of Streets, Platting of Land, etc., have been complied with.” Evidently as a result of this report the council adopted two votes. One was “that the Council hereby approves of the revised plan of the lay *383

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Related

Daviau v. Planning Commission
387 A.2d 562 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1978)
Thompson v. Town of Portland
266 A.2d 893 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1970)
DiCioccio v. Town of Wethersfield
152 A.2d 308 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
51 A.2d 917, 133 Conn. 377, 1947 Conn. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chattaway-v-city-of-new-london-conn-1947.