City of Camden v. Armstrong Cork Co.

210 F. 818, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1928
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 31, 1913
DocketNo. 1728
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 210 F. 818 (City of Camden v. Armstrong Cork Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Camden v. Armstrong Cork Co., 210 F. 818, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1928 (3d Cir. 1913).

Opinion

BUFFINGTON, Circuit Judge.

In the court below, the city of Camden, N. J., brought an action of ejectment against the Armstrong Cork Company, a corporation of Pennsylvania. The suit concerns a strip of land in Camden 820 feet in length and 33 in breadth, which the city, alleges was dedicated by the owners thereof to public use as an extension of Winslow street. The locus in quo was originally submerged bottom land, lying between high and low water marks on the Delaware river. It was subsequently filled by the abutting upland own[820]*820ers, and thereafter by sundry mesne conveyances vested in defendant. No street has ever been opened over the ground, and it has been used by defendant as part of its inclosed factory premises, some buildings in fact being located thereon.

[1] Under the proofs the case turned on the issue of dedication, and dedication, as is well settled (Irwin v. Dixion, 9 How. [50 U. S.] 30, 13 L. Ed. 25), is a question of intent. If such intention is unequivocally manifested by the dedicatory instrument, the court so holds: Elliott on Streets (3d Ed.) vol. 1, § 131; but if it is ambiguous, dedication is an inference to be drawn by a jury from all the facts and circumstances of the case: Atlantic City v. Groff, 68 N. J. Law, 670, 54 Atl. 800; Wood v. Hurd, 34 N. J. Law, 87.

[2] In this case the proofs consisted of maps, deeds, and oral testimony, and at the close of the case both sides asked for binding instructions. Thereupon the court directed a verdict for defendant. On entry of judgment this writ was sued out. The only two errors now urged are the refusal of plaintiff’s, and the grant of defendant’s, requests for directions. Both parties having asked for binding instructions, and the facts having been thus submitted to the court, we are limited in reviewing its action to the consideration of the correctness of the findings on the law, and must affirm, if there be any evidence in support thereof.. Beuttell v. Magone, 157 U. S. 154, 15 Sup. Ct. 566, 39 L. Ed. 654.

[3] As the case turns on the question of an intent to dedicate, it follows that if these proofs disclose evidence from which the intention not to dedicate — which the court found — could be inferred, its judgment will not be disturbed.' In other words, both parties having united in calling on the court to decide the whole case, its judgment should stand, if there was substantial evidence on which to rest.

[4] Pursuant to our rule requiring “a concise abstract, or statement of the case, presenting súccinctly the questions involved,” the plaintiff thus summarizes the question before us:

“Although the defendant may claim to have a good paper or record title to the land in dispute, it is contended by the plaintiff that the defendant acquired title to said lands subject to the easement of the public in Winslow-street as a highway by reason of certain dedications. These alleged dedications are based mainly on the construction of three different maps, known, respectively, as the Mickle map, Exhibit P 15, the Manufacturers’ Land & Improvement Company map, known as the Bourquin plan, Exhibit P 14, and Camden’s Official Map, Exhibit P 16.”

Turning first to the Mickle map, the pertinent part of the littoral portion of which is here reproduced, we note that Isaac Mickle, when he piade this map in 1872, owned the tract of land abutting the Delaware river, which he laid out in lots and streets plotted thereon. Fronting said upland, and lying between high and low water marks, was a fiat or meadow containing some 24 acres. In view of the New Jersey decisions (Gough v. Bell, 22 N. J. Law, 441, Stevens v. Patterson, 34 N. J. Law, 532, 3 Am. Rep. 269, and the New Jersey Act of March 31, 1869, § 8, P. L. 1022), the court below rightly said:

“It is true that at that time Mickle did not own the land under high water; it belonged to the state of New Jersey. However, the riparian owner, [821]*821that is, the owner of the upland hounded on high water, had the right to fill in the land submerged by the tides, by complying with the state statutes and regulations, and exclude the water from overflowing the land- thus made. So that while Mickle did not actually own the land which was being submerged, he stood in a different relation to the upland from a mere stranger.”

Such being the relation of the upland and the submerged meadow, and Mickle as upland owner being the possible future owner of the latter, he made the map in question. It treats the upland and submerged meadow as a whole. Its plotting unmistakably shows an intent on Mickle’s part, not only to lay out lots and dedicate streets on the upland, but evidences as well his purpose to fill the submerged frontage and to lay out such a connected system of streets through his submerged land as to connect with his upland streets. Moreover, it will be noted he treated the different parts of the submerged abutting land in dissimilar ways. To illustrate: A creek or estuary divided the submerged land into two parts. North of the creek block lots were plotted on the submerged land, and the upland streets were run clear across such submerged land, so as to reach a plotted cross street which ran along the low-water line. But south.of the creek no cross street was laid out on the submerged land at or near the low-water line, but only through the main body of the submerged tract. To this cross street and no further, were the upland cross streets, including Wins-low, carried down. It is suggested that the making of Winslow street across the submerged land by dotted line evidences only a possible, but not an actually, run or dedicated street. It is true that in surveys dotting is often used where a line has not been actually run. Newman v. Foster, 3 How. (Miss.) 383, 34 Am. Dec. 98, but this map, as well as the two othérs- here in question, use dotting to indicate lines on submerged ground. Moreover, that some dotted lines on this meadow were actually run is shown by the recorded measurements of three of its sides.

In further contrast it will be noted that south of the creek the whole meadow in front of the cross street at which Winslow, Viola, Emerald, Jasper, Ionia, and Van Hook streets ended was plotted in a solid tract of ascertained acreage, thus evidencing Mickle’s' purpose not to give Winslow street a water outlet, but that when the flat was reclaimed Winslow street was to stop at the intersecting cross street. It is, however, contended that as Winslow street was plotted to reach the then high-water line, that fact alone should be considered, and from it a dedication to high-water mark be inferred and decreed. But such reasoning is to our mind unsound in logic, unjust in principle, and at variance with rules of construction. The whole map, the ownership of the upland, its incident of reclamation and possible ownership of the abutting submerged land, the utilization of such filled land for wharves, manufacturing, and other private uses in a large city, were factors in the mind of a riparian owner making a plot that cannot justly be ignored in ascertaining the purpose sought to be expressed by his map. Indeed, to hold that this map dedicates Winslow street to high-water mark sets at naught an intention to the contrary, as clearly expressed in this map by lines and limits as Isaac Mickle could have expressed it in words. That even the actual opening of a road to the water front [822]

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Bluebook (online)
210 F. 818, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-camden-v-armstrong-cork-co-ca3-1913.