Glenn v. Village of Reynoldsburg

200 N.E.2d 698, 119 Ohio App. 535, 28 Ohio Op. 2d 145, 1963 Ohio App. LEXIS 761
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1963
Docket7325
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 200 N.E.2d 698 (Glenn v. Village of Reynoldsburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glenn v. Village of Reynoldsburg, 200 N.E.2d 698, 119 Ohio App. 535, 28 Ohio Op. 2d 145, 1963 Ohio App. LEXIS 761 (Ohio Ct. App. 1963).

Opinions

Bryant, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law by Harley W. Glenn, appellant herein, plaintiff in the court below, from the judgment and final order rendered in the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas in favor of the village of Reynoldsburg, Ohio, and the George J. Igel & Company, Inc., appellees herein, defendants below. From an examination of the record, it appears that the principal controversy is between Glenn and the village of Reynoldsburg, hereinafter called the village.

It appears that the chief connection to this case of the George J. Igel & Company, Inc., hereinafter called Igel, was as sewer contractor employed by the village to lay a sewer line on the property involved in this lawsuit, and that the construction work of Igel has been either fully or substantially completed before this time.

The property in question is a narrow strip of land measuring one foot in width and 1,215.33 feet in length. From the pleadings and evidence in this case, including the two parts of plaintiff’s exhibit A attached to the bill of exceptions, it appears that Austin W. Howell, on May 21, 1924, signed and acknowledged a plat for the “East Main Street Crest Addition” which was described as “a subdivision of 14.39 acres off of the north end of a 20-acre tract of land in Truro Twp. Franklin Co. and state of Ohio * * The plat was approved and accepted by the then county surveyor; was approved and accepted by the Board of County Commissioners of Franklin County *537 ‘ ‘ and the roads, streets and alleys herein dedicated to public use are hereby accepted as such for the County of Franklin, state of Ohio. ’ ’

The land represented by the plat was then transferred by the county auditor and the plat was recorded by the county recorder on May 31,1924. The following language also appears as part of the caption or heading of the plat:

“All streets, roads and alleys lying within said bounds and not here in tofore dedicated are hereby dedicated to public use as such, except a strip one foot wide along the East and West line of said tract of land which is hereby reserved to be dedicated when the adjoining owners so dedicates an equal width of alley.”

As heretofore indicated, the plat related to land which was located in Truro Township, Franklin County, Ohio. It was substantially rectangular in shape. The property faced on the south side of “Main Street or Natl. Road,” this frontage measuring approximately 490 feet from east to west. The platted land extended in a southerly direction from the National Road for a distance of 1,215.33 feet on the west side and 1,261.99 feet on the east side due to the fact that it did not abut upon the highway at right angles. In the center of the plat was Crest Street with a width of 60 feet, while on each side of it abutting on the highway were four lots each with a Main Street (Natl. Road) frontage of approximately 52 feet and a depth of from 161 feet to 206 feet. South of these eight lots was a 15-foot alley, and still further south on each side of Crest Street were 20 lots with a 50-foot frontage on Crest Street and a depth of 205 feet. At the extreme south end of the plat was Dale Street having a width of 40 feet.

Along both the east side and the west side of the plat there were strips of land 10 feet wide divided so that 9 of the 10 feet were dedicated as a public alley and the remaining one-foot strip was not dedicated. This one-foot strip was on the extreme outside of the plat along the entire east side and the west side. It would seem to us that, in 1924 at least, these two one-foot strips were not dedicated for any public purpose whatsoever but, on the contrary, were expressly excepted or reserved from any such dedication until the happening in the future of a dedi *538 cation of another 10-foot strip by the owners of the property abutting the platted land on the east side and on the west side.

Directly involved in this lawsuit is the one-foot by 1,215.33-foot strip of land excepted from the 1924 dedication and lying along the west side of the platted land shown on plaintiff’s exhibit A. We have already made reference to the express provision in the plat dedicating certain land for public use “except a strip one foot wide along the east and west line of said tract of land which is hereby reserved to be dedicated when the adjoining owners so dedicate an equal width of alley.”

It would appear that the county auditor in making the necessary adjustments on the tax duplicate due to this plat regarded the land in question, which we shall refer to as the “West One-Foot Strip,” as the property of Austin W. Howell, owner of the entire 1,439 acres prior to the time it was platted.

It appears also that, as to the “West One-Foot Strip,” the taxes were not paid and became delinquent, and in due course the entire “West One-Foot Strip” was forfeited to the state of Ohio for nonpayment of taxes. Thereafter, it was put up for sale at the county auditor’s sale of forfeited land and was purchased by Harley W. Glenn, plaintiff, appellant herein, the auditor’s deed to Glenn being dated April 5, 1937.

This strip of land was placed on the tax duplicate in the name of Harley W. Glenn, and he paid the full amount of real estate taxes levied against it each year since 1937, until 1959, and any claim to the contrary has been expressly withdrawn. So far as appears in the record, no owners of land adjoining the plat on either the west side or the east side had taken any steps to accept the offer made by Howell in exhibit A by dedicating for public use as an alley an additional 10 feet of land alongside the East Main Street Crest Addition in the period between 1924 when the plat was filed and April 5, 1937, when the property was forfeited to the state and then sold at tax sale to Glenn.

Nor is it claimed that the additional 10 feet for an alley on either the west side or the east side was dedicated by “the adjoining owners” in the 12 years that followed the tax sale to Glenn.

However, in 1959 action began to take place to accept the *539 offer made 35 years prior thereto by Austin W. Howell. It appears that the property in the meantime had become a part of the village of Reynoldsburg and that health authorities objected to the use of septic tanks in the area and insisted that a sewer line be built to serve the residences in the area.

In any event, and for whatever reason, a special plat was filed for record on May 28,1959, by Byron E. and Carolyn E. G. Sabin, owners of a tract of 8.235 acres (defendants’ exhibit No. 1), in which the Sabins dedicated for alley purposes a strip 10 feet wide running along the entire west side of the “East Main Street Crest Addition” (plaintiff’s exhibit A). The language on the plat over the signatures of the Sabins reads as follows:

“The undersigned Byron E. Sabin and Carolyn E. G. Sabin, his wife hereby certify that the attached plat correctly represents an alley to be dedicated for public use out of their 8.235 acre tract in state of Ohio, county of Franklin, township of Truro, village of Reynoldsburg, * *

The Sabin plat was also endorsed by the mayor, clerk and planning commission of Reynoldsburg above whose signatures appears the following:

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Related

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372 N.E.2d 608 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1976)

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Bluebook (online)
200 N.E.2d 698, 119 Ohio App. 535, 28 Ohio Op. 2d 145, 1963 Ohio App. LEXIS 761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenn-v-village-of-reynoldsburg-ohioctapp-1963.