Dinneen v. Corp. for the Relief of the Widows & Children of the Clergy of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the Diocese of Maryland

79 A. 1021, 114 Md. 589, 1911 Md. LEXIS 22
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 79 A. 1021 (Dinneen v. Corp. for the Relief of the Widows & Children of the Clergy of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the Diocese of Maryland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dinneen v. Corp. for the Relief of the Widows & Children of the Clergy of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the Diocese of Maryland, 79 A. 1021, 114 Md. 589, 1911 Md. LEXIS 22 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant is the owner of certain land in the suburbs of Baltimore City under, a deed whose descriptive line's extend along the center of an existing road which was mentioned in the deed and shown on the plat to which it referred. Whether the appellant has the right to close the road, under the circumstances indicated in the record, is the question to be determined on this appeal.

The case originated in a bill in equity, filed by the appellant, to restrain the removal of a fence which she had constructed along the centre of the road. It was alleged in the bill that the complainant, on or about June 10th, 1904, purchased from the defendants two lots of ground in fee described in their deed to her of that date duly exhibited; that the first line of the land so conveyed is located in the centre of a private road leading from the intersection of Holly avenue and Seventeenth street, both of which are public thor,oughfares, to an adjoining four-acre tract ujion which is *591 located Mt. Holly Inn; that at the time of the complainant’s purchase the adjacent tract was also owned by the defendants; that her part of the private road is subject to no easement in the defendant or the public generally; that in order not to be barred as to her right to the portion of the road included within the lines of her deed by the provisions of the Act of 1908, Chapter 583, approved April 8th, 1908, declaring a conclusive presumption of dedication in reference to roads situated like the one in question in Baltimore City, if left open for more than one year .after the passage of the Act, the complainant on April 1st, 1909, “.fenced in her portion of said road hereinbefore referred to with a post and wire fence; secured signs thereon stating that said road was closed pursuant to law and strung lanterns on said fence at night to warn drivers and pedestrians of such fact.” The bill further averred that on or -about April 6th, 1909, the defendants removed a portion of the fence and announced their intention to remove it as often as it might be reconstructed; and that the acts of the defendants, with the consequent liability to loss of her rights under the Act of 1908, subject the complainant to irreparable injury for which she has no adequate remedy at law.

By way of answer and cross-bill the defendants, after certain admissions and denials, not necessary to be noticed, alleged that the road referred to in the complainant’s deed and shown on the plat, which is exhibited with the answer, was laid out in 1901, by the owner of all the property embraced in the plat, and has since been freely used by the patrons and owners of the Mt. Holly Inn, and also by the owners of all the other property which the plat indicates; that at the time of the execution and delivery of the complainant’s deed the defendants were the owners of all the land served by the road, except the_inn tract, a ninety-nine-year leasehold estate in which they had previously contracted to sell and shortly afterwards conveyed to James L. Eilon, taking a mortgage for part of the purchase money; that the *592 road was then clearly defined, open, macadamized and much used; that the complainant purchased the property described in her deed subject to this known and visible condition and use of the road; that it is in fact a way of necessity for the inn tract, and also for a larger tract to the west belonging- to the defendants, and that neither of these tracts have any other available means of entrance or exit. The defendant prayed for a mandatory injunction requiring the plaintiff to i’emove the obstruction placed by her in the road.

To the cross-bill the plaintiff filed an answer denying its sufficiency to entitle the defendants to the relief prayed. The answer alleges that at the time the plaintiff acquired her title the road in controversy was rough and ill-kept, and had been but recently opened. It denies that it was and is a way of necessity for the inn tract or any other land, because as it avers there is a road, other than the one fenced by the plaintiff, which leads from the Windsor Mill road, a public thoroughfare, to the Mt. Holly Inn, and affords access to all the land shown on the plat; it further denies that the erection of the fence was in violation of any of the rights of the defendants or their grantee Eilon, and relies upon the omission of any express reservation to the grantors in the plaintiff’s deed of an easement in the part of the road included within its description.

At the time of the filing of the bill of complaint Mr. Eilon, the grantee of the Mt. Holly Inn property, was dead, and letters of administration had been granted to his widow, Mary L. Eilon by the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City. Subsequently the defendants sold and conveyed to Mrs. Eilon the remainder of the land abutting on the road in question, subject to a mortgage for a portion of the purchase price, and as the title to the leasehold estate conveyed to her husband in the inn tract passed to her as administratrix, she was, upon due application, made a party defendant in both her individual and representative capacities. Her answer adopts that of the original defendants, and avers that when *593 she acquired her property the road in its present location was open, unobstructed and in constant' use, and that she and her predecessors in title have from time to time improved the roadway, with the full knowledge of the plaintiff, and have thereby incurred large expense for the resurfacing of the road with crushed stone and for constructing and maintaining a footpath, hedges and fences along the side, all of which was done openly and with the assent of the plaintiff, who is alleged to be estopped from asserting that the road is not dedicated to the public, or from setting up any right or title therein, except that of user.

A preliminary injunction was issued upon the bill when it was filed, but this was dissolved upon motion after the filing of the answer and cross-bill, all rights of the plaintiff being reserved for determination by the final decree. The case was then brought to issue by general replication, and after the hearing upon an agreed statement and evidence offered, a decree was passed by the Court below denying the right of the plaintiff to maintain her fence along the centre of the road; but it appearing that the road as actually used encroached to a slight extent upon the plaintiff’s land at two points the decree provided that the plaintiff might, without interference by the defendants, enclose within her fence the portion of the roadway extending beyond its platted limits.

The evidence in the case showed that about a year before the plaintiff obtained her deed she entered into possession of part of the lot it descrih.es under k lease which included an option for the purchase of the whole of the lot, and that Mr. Eilon, about the same time, entered into the occupancy of Mt. Holly Inn under a contract of purchase. The plaintiff’s lease and option was dated June 1st, 1903, while Mr. Eilon’s contract bore date May 27th, 1903, but the testimony was conflicting as to whether the latter’s possession began and was known to the plaintiff prior to her own entry as lessee npon the adjacent premises. It was shown without contradiction, however, that at the time the plaintiff exercised her *594

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 A. 1021, 114 Md. 589, 1911 Md. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dinneen-v-corp-for-the-relief-of-the-widows-children-of-the-clergy-of-md-1911.