City of Gallipolis v. Mills

27 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 418, 1929 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1366
CourtGalia County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMay 6, 1929
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 418 (City of Gallipolis v. Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Galia County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Gallipolis v. Mills, 27 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 418, 1929 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1366 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1929).

Opinion

Whitcraft, J.

In each of the above cases the plaintiff alleges its corporate capacity and avers that it has a legal estate in, and is entitled to the possession of certain real estate described [419]*419in the petition. The prayer is for judgment for the possession thereof.

In each answer the defendant, after admitting the corporate capacity of plaintiff, denies generally the allegations of the plaintiff and by way of cross petition asserts ownership in fee in the premises and prays that the title thereto be quieted as against the city of Gallipolis.

The replies of the plaintiff are identical in their language and each denies that defendant is in possession of the premises described in the petition and avers that said defendant is not seized in fee of said lands.

The issues thus made up were submitted to the court, a jury having been waived by the parties.

Each of the defendants is the owner of lots or parcels of land bounding and abutting on the northeasterly side of Front Street (now First Avenue) of the city of Gallipolis, and each claims to own in fee simple a tract of equal width or frontage in front of and extending from the northeasterly side of First Avenue to low water mark of the Ohio river, subject to the easement of the public for travel thereover, and subject also the easement of the public for the purpose of navigation in that part between the top of the bank of the river and low water mark.

Some of the premises involved in these cases are a part of the town of Gallipolis as originally laid out and are bounded on the one side by the southeasterly tier of lots of' said town and on the other by low water mark of the Ohio river.

The original plat of the town (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1) discloses that all the long streets, including what is now First Avenue, run north 47 degrees east and are 66 feet and 10 inches in width except Front street, which is — feet. The last named street is the first one from the Ohio river, and between it and the river twenty eight lots or parcels of land were laid out of varying widths and depts and were denominated “garden lots.” These so called “garden lots” were laid out along the southeasterly side of Front street up the river to a point the length of one lot above Pine street. From this point the course of the river is changed perceptibly to the northwest, and should Front street have continued northeasterly to the extreme limits [420]*420of the town, as originally laid out, and the southeasterly line thereof been extended 'in the same general direction, that is to say, north 47 degrees east, there would have been little, if any, land between the southeasterly line of Front street and the top of the bank of the river.

However, no such line is shown on the plat, but from a point immediately northeast of Lots Nos. 361 and 362 and “garden lot” No. 28 Front street leads into an open or blank space bounded by a tier of lots on the northwesterly side and the river on the southeasterly side. This particular space is not marked or designated on the plat other than the name “Front street” appears some four blocks southeasterly therefrom.

We learn from the evidence and statements of counsel that as early as 1805 a public road was laid out by the county commissioners of Gall.'a county from the county jail to Reese’s Landing opposite Point Pleasant and distant about four miles up the river. This highway is now State Route No. 7, and so long as the oldest citizen can remember the traveled portion thereof has been in substantially the same place on the blank space indicated on the plat above mentioned. The public has used it for the purpose of travel so long “that the memory of man runneth not to the contrary;” and it may be reasonably presumed that for almost a century and a quarter the public has continuously .used this so called blank space, or so much thereof as was reasonably necessary for the purpose of travel thereover. No lots were laid out on the river side and no use was made so far as the testimony discloses of any part of this tract except for street or highway purposes until within the last twenty-five years.

The flood of 1884 made a substantial change in the course of the river at this point. It cut into the bank, and, at some points, near the traveled portion of the street or highway; and the owners of property immediately northeasterly therefrom, evidently became alarmed and fearful of the in-roads that might be made by subsequent floods, naving a desire to protect their premises from further advances of the river, caused several thousand willows to be planted at the foot of the almost perpendicular-bank- with a -veiw of arresting, the threatened injury [421]*421to their property by the water. From the foot of the bank to the low water mark, in 1884 and for some years thereafter, there was nothing but sand and gravel which was subject to frequent overflows aed of no value for any purpose.

The testimony discloses that the growth of the willows caused such a change in the flow of the water as to form an eddy, and, with the rise of the water, deposits of silt and alluvium were made from time to time, so that there -is now from twelve to sixteen feet of new soil of great fertility which the defendants and their predecessors in title have used for gardening purposes for from eighteen to twenty-seven years.

None of the lands in question have ever been entered upon the tax duplicate for taxation, but a building or shack was maintained for a time by the defendant Canady on the ..premises claimed by him and upon which he paid taxes at a valuation of $100.00.

The determination of the rights of the parties in these cases', so far as the several tracts of land located within the limits of the original town of Gallipolis is concerned, depends upon whether there was a dedication to public use of the so-called blank or undesignated space appearing upon Exhibit 1, and an acceptance thereof by the public.

What is required to constitute a dedication either at common law or by statute and the acceptance thereof by the public is too well settled to require the citation of authorities at length.

It may be stated as a general rule that to constitute a valid dedication there must be an intention on the part of the owner to devote his property to the public use, and this intention must be clearly and unequivocably manifested; but the intention which the courts give heed to is not an intention hidden in the mind of the land owner, but an intention manifested by his acts. 13 Cyc. 452 and cases cited; Fulton v. Mahrenfeld, 8 O. S., 440; Wright v. Oberlin, 3 C. C. (N. S.) 242.

No formal acceptance was required by the public, nor is it always necessary that it be accepted by the city coun-cillor other public authorities; but it may be accepted by the general public. 13 Cyc., 465.

[422]*422And the general public accepts by entering, upon the land and enjoying the privileges offered; in other words by user.

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25 U.S. 582 (Supreme Court, 1827)

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Bluebook (online)
27 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 418, 1929 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-gallipolis-v-mills-ohctcomplgalia-1929.