City of St. Louis v. Meyer

13 Mo. App. 367, 1883 Mo. App. LEXIS 128
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 Mo. App. 367 (City of St. Louis v. Meyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of St. Louis v. Meyer, 13 Mo. App. 367, 1883 Mo. App. LEXIS 128 (Mo. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

Bake well, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is ejectment for a piece of ground in the city of St. Louis, described in the petition as “ beginning at the northwest corner of the Baccanné tract of two by forty arpens in the Little Prairie of St. Louis, as represented on a plat of the survey and subdivision of the St. Louis Commons, as [370]*370made by Charles DeWard, under authority of the city of St. Louis, and approved by the mayor, March 30, 1839, and duly recorded in plat book 3, page 24, which point is five feet five and three-eighth inches south of the southern line- of Shenandoah Street as now located by the city authorities ; thence, with the northern line of said Baccanné tract, as so surveyed by the said DeWard, eastwardly one thousand and eighty-eight feet, more or less, to a point in the western line of California Avenue, sixty feet wide, distant two hundred and eleven feet three and one-fourth inches southwardly from said Shenandoah Street, measured along the western line of said California Avenue ; thence south-wardly, with the western line of said California Avenue, thirty feet six and one-half inches to a point in the northern line of the subdivision of the Baccanne tract, which is coincident with the southern line of Victor Street, as the same is located and dedicated to the eastward of said California Avenue, and which point is distant two hundred and forty-one feet nine and three-fourth inches southward from said Shenandoah Street; thence westwardly, with a line parallel to and thirty feet distant from said northern line of said Baccanne tract, one thousand one hundred and one feet two inches, more or less, to an old stone in the western boundary line of the said Little Prairie Fields, which stone is thirty-seven feet nine and five-eighth inches southward from Shenandoah Street, measured along the western line of said fields ; thence with the said western boundary line of the said Little Prairie Fields, thirty-two feet four and one-fourth inches to the place of beginning.”

The answer was a general denial. There was a verdict for plaintiff, and judgment accordingly.

Defendant, as tenant of DeMenil, Priest, and Pitzman, is in possession, under fence, of a piece of ground nearly triangular, bounded east by California Avenue, north by Shenandoah Street, south by what the plaintiff calls the [371]*371south line of Victor Street, running west between the two last-named lines to DeWard’s west line of the Little Prairie. The western boundary of the tract is only a few feet long.

It is claimed by the plaintiff that the Southern thirty feet of this tract, along what would be its hypothenuse if it could be exactly called triangular, from California Avenue to the west line of the Little Prairie, is the southern thirty feet of Victor Street as established by^city ordinance 6594. Plaintiff does not claim, however, under any proceedings for opening the street, but under a dedication which will be spoken of hereafter. Pitzman, for defendant, says that the southern thirty feet of the tract are the southern thirty feet of Victor Street, as described in the ordinance. But he says that that ordinance provided for a new street overground not dedicated.

The question is, whether the tract in controversy, which is a strip of thirty feet wide running parallel with Sidney Street from California Avenue west, for a mean distance of about eleven hundred feet, is, or is not, the northern thirty feet of the Baccanné tract. Appellant contends that the northern thirty feet of the Baccanné tract lie south of his possession; the city claims that the northern thirty feet of the Baccanné tract are within the defendant’s fence and constitute the southern thirty feet of this triangular tract.

United States Survey 3125, made by Brown, which is the St. Louis Commons, and also DeWard’s survey, set out in the petition, were put in evidence, as also the acts of congress of 1812, 1824, and 1831, under which the city derives title. The tract in controversy is in that part of the Commons where there were conflicting claims. Three of these claims, being concessions under the old governments confirmed by the United States, lie side by side. The Bac-canné tract was a concession of two by forty arpens. This [372]*372tract was bounded on the. south by the Barsaloux tract and on the north by the DeYolsey tract. The DeYolsey tract was United States- Survey 3077 and the Barsaloux tract was United States Survey 3121. Both of these tracts were surveyed by Brown, the deputy surveyor of the United States. All three of the tracts were surveyed by DeWard. The testimony of Cozzens is that DeWard conformed to the United States surveys down to the southern line of Mde. Chouteau’s claim, which is the northern line of the DeYolsey claim, but south of that he did not conform to the United States surveys. He did not give to the DeYolsey survey the width of six arpens called for by the grant, but made it sixty feet short in width.

So far as the dates of the respective surveys go, the testimony is not very clear. It is assumed in questions put to Mr. Cozzens, the surveyor, the main witness for plaintiff, that DeWard’s survey was subsequent to those' of Brown. Brown’s survey of the DeYolsey tract appears from the date to his notes to have been made on January 24, 1837 ; and his survey of the Barsaloux tract is dated November 14, 1837. Witnesses speak of DeWard’s survey as being made in 1836 and 1837. The certificate of DeWard on the plat in evidence is dated November 27,1838. But the survey was evidently completed before that date, and is referred to in the deed of the city to Baldwin and Bowlin, dated April, 1837. In one place Cozzens speaks of Brown not having yet executed the survey of the other claim. But the date he there seems to refer to is the date of the Chouteau survey. We gather from the whole testimony that the surveys of Brown of the DeYolsey and Barsaloux concessions were about contemporaneous with the surveys of the Barsaloux, Baccanné, and DeVolsey surveys by De-Ward. There seems to be nothing in the record from which it can be determined with any certainty that the [373]*373Brown surveys were prior in time to those of DeWard as city surveyor. However, all the witnesses who speak to the question are agreed, that if the lines of the United States surveys are taken in determining the location of the Baecanne tract, the property claimed by plaintiff is not the northern thirty feet of the Baecanne tract. The positions of the Barsaloux and DeVolsey claims fix that of the Baecanne tract, which lies between and is bounded by them. If the Baecanne tract is made to conform to Brown’s survey of the Barsaloux and DeVolsey tracts, it is moved at least thirty feet south of DeWard’s line, and south and outside of defendant’s fence.

Baecanne, in 1830, conveyed all his interest in the tract that bears his name, to Baldwin and Bowlin, describing it as bounded north by lands granted in 1767 to DeVolsey, and south by lands granted in 1768 to Bar-saloux.

In March, 1837, the city entered into a compromise with the claimants of the Barsaloux, Baecanne, and DeVolsey tracts. The deeds executed in pursuance of this compromise were not, however, immediately executed. That for the Barsaloux tract to Daggett and others was not executed until 1839. The United States survey for that tract was not completed befoi’e November 14, 1837, and there seems to have been a conflict amongst claimants to that tract, which, perhaps, caused delay in the execution of the deed.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bassett v. Glover
31 Mo. App. 150 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1888)
City of St. Louis v. Gleason
93 Mo. 33 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1887)
City of St. Louis v. Gleason
15 Mo. App. 25 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1884)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Mo. App. 367, 1883 Mo. App. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-st-louis-v-meyer-moctapp-1883.