Gates v. Orr

21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 273, 29 Ohio Dec. 328, 1919 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 8
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedFebruary 3, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 273 (Gates v. Orr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gates v. Orr, 21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 273, 29 Ohio Dec. 328, 1919 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 8 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1919).

Opinion

Geoghegan, J.

Tbe proceeding herein is an application under the land registration act (103 Ohio Laws, 914, amended 104 Ohio Laws, 146), to register the title of two parcels of land described in the application as “Tract A” and “Tract B.”

As to Tract A, there is no dispute.

[274]*274Tract B is described in the application as follows:

“That portion of the strip of land known as North Canal street, thirteen (13) feet and one (1) inch in width measured north and south, and one hundred and four (104) feet in length, measured east and west, immediately adjacent to and next south of the aforesaid lot, and extending from the center of the said wall fence to the east line of Olay street, the same to be and remain an open-way for the use of this and adjacent premises. ’ ’

This description is intended to cover a strip of land immediately in front of the property described in Tract A,- which is at the northeast corner of Canal and Olay streets, having a frontage of one hundred and four (10¡4) feet on what is described as the open-way, known as North Canal street.

The city of Cincinnati, which is made a defendant herein, contests the right of the plaintiff to have registered in her name the parcel described as Tract' B, and it was upon the issue made by the answer of the city of Cincinnati to the effect that the said Tract B constitutes and forms a portion of a public street known as Canal street or North Canal street, and also a plea of the statute of limitations of twenty-one years, the open, notorious, continuous and adverse user of said tract as a part of a public street for upwards of fifty years, of common law dedication and estoppel, that this case was submitted to the court upon the evidence and the arguments of counsel.

The examiner appointed by the common pleas court under and by authority of the land registration act, reported favorably upon the application to register Tract B.

However, there had been no hearing before the examiner, and the city, having been made a party to the action, relies principally upon matters which do not appear upon the face of the record, although insisting that the record itself discloses that the tract in question is a part of the public street.

The difficulty in this cases arises, in so far as the court can discern after an inspection of the record, the hearing of the evidence and an examination of the great number of exhibits offered in the ca.se, from the fact that the records do not disclose how much land was taken for the purposes of the Miami & [275]*275Erie canal by the commissioners appointed for that purpose in the 'early part of the last century.

The canal was built in 1828. At that time, Stephenson and .wife, predecessors in title of the plaintiff, were the owners in fee simple of Lot No. 3 of McFarland’s subdivision, part of the south thirteen feet of which are in question. In 1833, the canal commissioners assented to the use by the city for street purposes of such ground conveyed to the state as was not in actual use for the canal. Therefore, the first question that necessarily presents itself is — How much did the canal commissioners take for the purposes of the canal?

The evidence is plain that from the bend of the canal at Plum street, eastwarclly to Clay street, the canal was one hundred and fifty feet wide, that is, there were seventy-five feet of land taken north and south of the center line óf the canal, which the old plats indicate was approximately the center of Eleventh street. There is a deed offered in evidence from a certain Torrence to the state of Ohio, under date of April 11, 1826, which purports to establish a seventy-five feet line from the center of the canal for the property west of Main street. There is considerable doubt whether this deed conveyed any title or color of title, but, taken in connection with the fact that this same line described as seventy -live feet north of the center of Eleventh street has been recognized by disinterested persons from the date of the construction of the canal down to the present time, it may be said to be some evidence of the fact that the canal was one hundred and fifty feet wide west of Main street and east of that public street which was subsequently called Clay street.

Recitals in ancient deeds, documents and maps are competent evidence to prove the location of a disputed line, whether the line attempted to be proved is the one immediately in dispute between the parties or the one from the position of which the location of the immediately disputed line can be determined. Whitman v. Shaw, 166 Mass., 451; Hathaway v. Evans, 113 Mass., 264.

An examination of the deeds offered in evidence would indicate that various persons who owned real estate in this vicinity [276]*276conveyed their real estate by such descriptions as would indicate that the seventy-five feet line was the correct northern boundary of the property taken by the canal commissioners, that part of which not'occupied by the canal proper being known as Canal street or North Canal street, and William Stephenson, himself, who was the ancestor of the plaintiff herein, accepted a deed from Nicholas Longworth which fixes the north line of North Canal street as this seventy-five feet line.

Counsel for the plaintiff insist "that the description in the deeds referred to is erroneous, and it was omitted from the description in a subsequent deed from one Green, when he conveyed the Main street end of the lot to Stephenson in November, 1830.

While it is true that this so-called erroneous language was omitted, nevertheless, when Stephenson conveyed to Riddell he specified that his grantee “will never use or occupy the premises aforesaid for any other purpose or use than as a public street.” It is evident from this that Stephenson must have himself recognized that there was some doubt as to where his line was, and it is further evident that at the time of the conveyance the property must have been in some use by the public as a street, for, otherwise, it would not have been necessary for Stephenson to have made this restriction in his conveyance.

It would only encumber this decision to make further comment upon the great number of deeds that have been offered in evidence. There are a great many of them which can be reconciled with the fact that the north line of Canal street was seventy-five feet north of the center line of the canal. Even deeds accepted by the immediate ancestors of. the plaintiff contain descriptions which would indicate that line, notably the deed from Longworth, of the Clay street end, to Stephenson, in June, 1830, and the Main street end to Green in 1829, which described the property in such a way as to indicate the line of North Canal street to be where the city claims it is at this time.

While it is true that when Green conveyed to Stephenson, the alleged erroneous language was omitted from the description, and subsequent deeds from Stephenson to Riddell and Rid-dell to the City of Cincinnati did not conform to the original [277]*277description, nevertheless, it remains that the original deeds fixed a line which would seem more nearly in consonance with the line as claimed by the city to have been established by the canal commissioners and which conforms to the line of the canal for a number of blocks west of the property in question.

Besides this, we have in evidence a plat taken from Grade Book No.

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Related

Hathaway v. Evans
113 Mass. 264 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1873)
Whitman v. Shaw
44 N.E. 333 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 273, 29 Ohio Dec. 328, 1919 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gates-v-orr-ohctcomplhamilt-1919.