Hecker v. City of Denver

252 P. 808, 80 Colo. 390, 1927 Colo. LEXIS 270
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 3, 1927
DocketNo. 11,474.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 252 P. 808 (Hecker v. City of Denver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hecker v. City of Denver, 252 P. 808, 80 Colo. 390, 1927 Colo. LEXIS 270 (Colo. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintive Hecker brought this action against the City and County of Denver to quiet her title to two city lots. The answer has twelve separate defenses including a general denial. The decree of the court is that the plaintiff owns the fee and the defendant city has an easement and a right of way over the entire, width and length of the lots for street and highway purposes. Plaintiff brings error. The decree apparently is based upon the defense of the answer that alleges that the lots in question are, and for more than twenty years have been, part of a public street of the city,, and of its predecessor, known as Mexico street and, as such, part of the main traveled 'state and interstate highway extending from *392 Wyoming on the north to New Mexico on the south and passing through the city of Denver. The finding of facts by the court is general and it is broad enough to cover this particular defense and some other defenses of the answer. There are nine separate assignments of error, some of which contain many subdivisions. Diligent counsel for plaintiff in error has elaborately discussed numerous international and constitutional questions, federal and state, and has crammed into his briefs a multitude of American and English cases upon a variety of legal subjects. His abstract of the record, 110 pages, is so interlarded with argument and comment upon the weight and sufficiency of the testimony and various alleged irregularities and errors of the trial court, some of which are not included in the assignments of error, as to confuse what an abstract is designed to clarify. Were it not for the supplemental abstract of the defendant in error, consisting of 99 pages, it would be difficult to ascertain what questions were litigated and what were actually determined.

Assuming with plaintiff in error, but not so deciding, that she had the requisite possession of the premises when her complaint was filed, and that the many authorities she cites state the applicable principles of law to the cases in hand, we are unable after repeated readings to discover their pertinency to what the trial court below correctly determined to be the controlling question in the case. That the findings and decree are right and must stand, we have no doubt. The essential facts, in substance, are that in 1889 the owner of a tract of land in what was then the town of South Denver (which was annexed to the city of Denver in 1894) laid out the same or a part thereof into blocks and lots as the Overland Park subdivision and made a plat thereof and filed it in the recorder’s office. On this plat and as part thereof is block C containing 42 lots, numbered 1 to 42 *393 consecutively. The subdivision lies between the Santa Fe Railroad right of way on the west and South Fourteenth street, now called Bannock street, on the east. (See Plate 1, Exhibit J.)

The-lots, except those numbered 25 and 26, the ones in controversy here, are 25 feet in width. Each of these two lots is 30 feet wide, the combined width of 60 feet being the width of Mexico street, which is shown on the plat. These lots exactly conform lengthwise east and west to the lineal course of the street and the external *394 lines thereof Both east and west. The plat on its face does not show that Mexico street extends farther west than the east line of block C, but the fact is clearly established by the evidence that at the time when the map was filed, and long before, Mexico street had been and still was uninterruptedly traveled and used as a highway by the public, not only to the east and west of this block but directly over and across lots 25 and 26 thereof as one continuous line of travel 60 feet wide. This difference in the width of the two lots, apparently making them 60 feet wide to conform to the width and course of Mexico street, while each of the other lots in the block is only 25 feet wide, is at least some, indication of a recognition by the owner of the existence of a highway across this 60 feet strip. But there are stronger reasons in support of the decree. For many years, at least thirty, before this suit was brought, Mexico street had been, as already stated, continuously and uninterruptedly traveled and used by the public as a highway, and the same extended over and included as a part of such highway what is designated on this plat as lots 25 and 26 and maintained by the public authorities as such. The fee of the lots, as the court found, is undoubtedly in the plaintiff, but under the evidence the easement as a highway over and across them is in the defendant. We shall make no attempt to summarize the large volume of evidence. It is sufficient to say that the decree may bé vindicated upon either, or both, of two unassailable grounds each of which is set up as a separate defense in the answer. The evidence clearly discloses all the elements of title by prescription. There was also a common-law dedication. For a period running back beyond the memory of any of the witnesses who testified, certainly for at 'least thirty years, Mexico street, including what has been platted as lots 25 and 26 of block C, has been continuously and uninterruptedly used and traveled by the general public. The city has maintained it as a public *395 highway the same as it has maintained and cared for other streets in this vicinity. There seems to be no doubt that a prescriptive right has been established. Goerke v. Manitou, 25. Colo. App. 482, 491, 139 Pac. 1049; Dunbar v. Kohler, 66 Colo. 272, 180 Pac. 739; Olson v. .People, 56 Colo. 199, 138 Pac. 21; 1 Elliott on Roads and Streets (3d Ed.) secs. 188 to 201, etc.; 3 Dillion on Municipal Corp. (5th Ed.) secs. 1079 et seq.

The trial court also properly found a common-law dedication which operates not as a grant, but by way of estoppel. While all of block C was owned by a private corporation, The Plattner Implement Company, a number of years before plaintiff’s title was acquired, and while taxes were being assessed en masse on block C by the public authorities and paid by the owner, the president of this corporation, and under its authority, acknowledged and recognized the existence of Mexico street as a public highway across these two lots in question and expressly consented to such further use by the public. This recognition and consent may have been partly due to the permission given by the city authorities to the private corporation to use a part of what had been Colorado street, one block south of Mexico, for building purposes, but the president in his testimony makes it clear that he was advised by his counsel, and so believed and recognized, that the uninterrupted use of Mexico street as a highway across these lots for such a long period of time operated as an estoppel against the owner of the fee to assert otherwise. That such testimony by a former owner of the premises is admissible in a suit like this is beyond question. Then, too, the plaintiff herself, before she acquired title to the fee of these lots, knew of the existence of Mexico street and that it passed across these lots to the extent of their entire width and length, and she herself had traveled over the same as a public highway. The city has maintained for many years this street as one of its highways. Poles for *396

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Bluebook (online)
252 P. 808, 80 Colo. 390, 1927 Colo. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hecker-v-city-of-denver-colo-1927.