City of St. Louis v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

21 S.W. 202, 114 Mo. 13, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 193
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 6, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 21 S.W. 202 (City of St. Louis v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri 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. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 21 S.W. 202, 114 Mo. 13, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 193 (Mo. 1893).

Opinion

Babclay, J.

Plaintiff brought this action in ejectment to recover of defendant the possession of a tract of land in the present limits of St. Louis.

Upon issues joined, a trial was had, at the close of which the court declared that plaintiff could not recover, and accordingly entered a judgment for defendant. Plaintiff then appealed, after the customary motions and exceptions.

The case involves conflicting claims of title to a body of real estate on the bank of the Mississippi, in that part of St. Louis formerly composing the separate municipality of Carondelet.

The leading facts are admitted by both. parties. The only question is as to their legal sufficiency to [18]*18sustain the claim of ownership asserted by the plaintiff.

1. In examining that question we are to take into view all the testimony, whether offered by one or by the other party. For it is a rule of practice that, in considering the correctness of' an instruction in' the nature of a demurrer - to the evidence, the party on whom the burden of proof rested is entitled to the benefit of all the facts before the court at the time the instruction is given, as well as to all reasonable inferences therefrom, whether those facts were developed by the plaintiff or by the defendant.

Under the rule just stated we shall not, attempt to group the facts in the order in which they were presented to the trial court; but in such sequence as will exhibit the merits of the controversy as shortly as possible.

2. The main issue is found in that part of the case which concerns the claim of defendant to the land in suit as an accretion to city block number 3123, formerly known as block 22, of Maekay’s survey of the Caron delet commons. That survey was made by direction of the trustees of the town in 1847, and an official plat thereof, acknowledged by the chairman of the board of trustees, was duly recorded May 25, 1847.

Mackay’s survey was supplemental to an earlier one by Mr. Filer (under authority of the town act of 1808, 1 Territorial Laws, p. 184), made in 1832 and evidenced by a plat duly recorded in that year on which the town of Carondelet and the adjacent commons were exhibited.

By act of the General Assembly, February 13, 1833, the board of trustees received express authority to sell and convey all the vacant lots of ground to which the inhabitants of the town had legal or equitable [19]*19title, and which were included in Eiler’s survey (2 Territorial Laws, p. 393).

Mackay’s survey was in effect but a continuation southward of the survey by Eiler, conforming to the latter. The tier of unnumbered blocks indicated on the north side of Mackay’s is the same shown on the south side of Eiler’s map.

In 1833 the town adopted an ordinance declaring “that no impediment -or obstruction of any nature whatever shall be built, set up or erected in or on the tow path or Water street, extending along the Mississippi river, within the limits of said town,” under a penalty; and making further provisions for the removal of driftwood from the river bank so as to secure “a free access to the place of landing,” within the town.

In 1851 the inhabitants were incorporated as the city of Carondelet, with defined limits, including the property in suit (Session Laws, 1850-1, sec. 2. p. 139). In the act of incorporation, Mackay’s survey is mentioned in describing the corporate boundaries.

Defendant, by various conveyances, has a paper title to block 22 of Mackay’s survey, which plaintiff does not dispute. The property in controversy is that which has been formed by accretion since 1847, east of the river line indicated on Mackay’s plat, and opposite block 22. This alluvion at the time of the trial amounted to a considerable tract of about three hundred and twenty-eight feet in length along the river, by a depth of two hundred feet westward therefrom. It is this that defendant claims to own as appurtenant to block 22.

In 1870 the city of St. Louis, which until then adjoined Carondelet, was extended to embrace the latter with the property in question (St. Louis Charter, 1870; Session Laws, 1870, sec. 2, p. 461, and see. 4. p. 487).

[20]*20■ By the law in force in 1847, when the dedication accompanying the Maekay plat was made, the title to those portions of the land indicated thereon as streets passed in fee to the county of St. Louis, in trust for the public (sec. 6, p. 1056, Revised Statutes, 1845). By the “scheme” for the separation of the city from the county of St. Louis that title passed to the city, the present plaintiff (Scheme & Charter; Revised Statutes, 1889, sec. 10, p. 2078).

Thus plaintiff has succeeded to the title of the inhabitants of the town of Oarondelet by virtue of the legislation on that subject.

Plaintiff’s contention is that the property in controversy belongs to it for public use, as an accretion to the street fronting the river, and not to block 22.

In examining the merits of that contention it will be well to keep in mind the general nature of the title held by the inhabitants of Oarondelet. That title originated before the cession of the territory of Louisiana to the United States government in 1803. Its extent has been the subject of much litigation, in the reports of which will be founded a history of its devolution. Dent v. Bingham, 8 Mo. (1844), 579; Carondelet v. McPherson, 20 Mo. (1854), 192; The Carondelet Case, 9 Court of Claims (1873), 455.

It will not be necessary in this action to go further into that history than to say that block 22 and the adjoining land belonged to that class of property known as the Oarondelet “commons,” a species of property having its origin in the laws and customs of continental Europe (compare “ The Swiss Allmends,” 19 Journal of Jurisprudence, 369), but recognized in Missouri (under the treaty of Paris for the cession of Louisiana in 1803, and the acts of Congress giving effect thereto) by many public acts (e. g., 1 Territorial Laws (1809), p. 184; 2 Territorial Laws [21]*21(1835), p. 501), and judgments of the courts (for instance: Carondelet v. Lannan, 26 Mo. (1858), 461; Carondelet v. St. Louis, 25 Mo. (1857), 449, and 1 Black, 179; Dent v. Emmeger, 14 Wall (1871), 308).

In subjecting such property to our local laws, portions of it have been made vendible by express enactments. 4 United States Statutes at large, p, 435; 2 Territorial Laws, pp. 393, 501; Session Laws, 1838-9, p. 210; Session Laws, 1850-1, sec. 1, p. 148. And defendant’s title to block 22, which is not disputed, rests upon transfers predicated on authority to sell.

The Carondelet commons, as shown upon Eiler’s plat, reached the Mississippi river, and the specific description of that part thereof, surveyed later by Mackay, calls for that river as the eastern boundary of the tract. So that the owner of the Carondelet title to the shore of that river at the point of controversy is plainly the riparian owner within the meaning of the law.

The right of the riparian proprietor to the increase of his possessions caused by the imperceptible deposit of alluvion on the banks of public waters is well recognized in the English as in many other systems of law.

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.W. 202, 114 Mo. 13, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-st-louis-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-mo-1893.