City of Denver v. Pearce

13 Colo. 383
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 5, 1889
DocketNo. 1804.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 13 Colo. 383 (City of Denver v. Pearce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Denver v. Pearce, 13 Colo. 383 (Colo. 1889).

Opinion

*385 Pattison, C.

The issue between the parties in this case involves the title to so much of the premises above described as lie between the easterly bank of Cherry creek and the thread of the stream. No other question is discussed by counsel. The solution of this question requires consideration of the history of the title to the premises, and a construction of the conveyances under which the parties claim. This history must be looked for, not only in the evidence and in the deeds of conveyance set forth in the record, but also in the statutes of the United States and of this state relating to town-sites, which were in force at the time the deeds were executed and delivered. The first enactment of congress was approved May 23, 1844, and was entitled “An act for the relief.of the citizens of towns upon the lands of the United States, under certain circumstances.” This act provided for entry, under the laws of the United States, by the corporate authorities, or, if not incorporated, by the county judge of the county in which the town was situated, of any portion of the surveyed public lands occupied as a town-site, in trust, for the use and benefit of the occupants thereof. It was provided that the execution of the trust should be under regulations to be prescribed by the legislative authority of the state or territory in which the town -was located. Laws 18444, p. 12. May 28, 1861, by an act entitled “An act for the relief of the citizens of Denver, in the territory of Colorado,” the act last cited was so extended as to “authorize the probate judge of Arapahoe county, in the territory of Colorado, to enter at the minimum price, in trust for the several use and benefit of the rightful occupants of said land, and the bona fide owners of the improvements thereon according to their respective interests,” certain legal subdivisions of land, which are particularly described in the act. Laws 1861, p. 91. Pursuant to this act, James Hall, then probate judge of Arapahoe county, entered at the land-office in Denver the lands described in the act. *386 By an act of the legislature of Colorado territory,, approved March 11, 1864, the conduct of the trustee in the execution of the trust was regulated and prescribed. Sess. Laws 1864, p. 139. Section 4 .of that act provided “that each and every pex-son or association claiming any portion of said lands should make a statement in wx-iting, within a specified time designated, describing the lands claimed, and their specific right or interest therein. ” This section further provided that “all persons failixxg to sign and deliver such statement within the time specified in this section shall be forever barred the right of claiming or recovering such lands, or axxy interest or estate therein, or in any part, parcel or share thereof, in any court of law or equity.” Under the provisions of these several legislative enactments, James Hall, as probate judge, and his successors in office, undertook the execution of the trust. In 1872 the trust remained unexecuted in respect to many parcels of land, including the premises in controversy in this action. By an act of the legislature approved February 8, 1872, provision was made for the sale of all town lots, or the parcels of land which had not theretofore been sold. Sess. Laws 1872, p. 191. By the provisions of this act the probate judge was required to make “ a list of all town lots or parcels of land * * * to which no person, association of persons, or body corporate, except the city of Denver, filed any claim with the probate judge of said county on or before the 9th day of August, 1865.” By the sixth section of the act he was further required “ to'give ten days’ previous notice, in a daily newspaper published in said city, of the time when he would commence making such list.” By the second section he was required, “immediately upon the preparation of said list, to advertise said lots and lands for sale, in some newspaper published ixi said city, for sixty days, at public vendue, to the highest bidder, for cash in hand.” Section 4 provided for the execution and delivery of deeds to the purchaser or pur *387 chasers of the lots or lands sold by virtue of the act. Pursuant to the provisions of this act, Henry A. Clough, probate judge, in the month of October, 1872, sold and conveyed to the grantor of appellee the premises above described, for the sum of $21. The several statutes above mentioned, and the steps taken under them in the execution of the trust, are recited in the deed of conveyance. The deed bears date October 18, 1872; was acknowledged November 1st, and recorded November 7, 1872. Upon the same day, pursuant to the same statute, in execution of the same trust, and at the same sale, Clough sold and conveyed to the appellant, for the sum of $5,050, a parcel of land described as follows: “The whole of the bed of Cherry creek, as the same is marked and defined on the map of said city, as per survey of P. J. Ebert, from the point where the same intersects the south line of the old bed of the South Platte river, to the point where the same intersects the south line of said section 33, save and except such parts and parcels thereof as may have been heretofore deeded by any probate judge since the entry of said land in trust as aforesaid, and save and except parcels of land eighty feet in width connecting the following streets in East and West Denver,” etc. The exceptions need not be recited. This deed was dated October 18, 1872; was acknowledged October 30th, and recorded October 31, 1872, and contains the same recitals as the deed to appellee’s grantor. It appears from the evidence that the notice of sale in which both of the parcels of land were mentioned was read before the sale. Both deeds designate the lands conveyed as a portion of the land described in the notice. The rights of the parties in the premises depend entirely upon the legal effect to be given to these conveyances. The question in the case is one of construction.

The inference is clear that the probate judge intended to convey, and appellant intended to acquire, all of the bed of Cherry creek which had not theretofore been con *388 veyed. To acquire control of the bed of Cherry creek, as defined by the Ebert survey, had long been the settled policy of the municipal authorities. This policy is clearly . disclosed by the record, and by the statutes which were in force at the time this sale was had. By an act approved February 10, 1865, the city was authorized to “ define and fix the boundaries of the channel of Cherry creek within the corporate limits of the city; to remove obstructions therefrom; and to prevent persons from obstructing the same.” Pursuant to this act, and on June 22," 1865, by formal resolution, the plat of the city made by F. J. Ebert was approved and ordered to be filed for record in the office of the recorder of Arapahoe county. By an ordinance thereafter enacted the channel of the bed of Cherry creek, within the corporate limits, was declared to be a public place; and it was further declared to be “ unlawful to place any wall, building, fence, dike, earth, manure, garbage or other obstruction in or upon the same.” By an act of the legislature approved February 9, 1872, it was provided that “the said city council shall have power and authority to condemn, and appropriate in fee to the use of the city, the strip of land within the bed of Cherry creek, as defined by the city council. * * Sess. Laws 1872, p. 207.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Colo. 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-denver-v-pearce-colo-1889.