Holmes v. Cleveland, C. & C. R.

93 F. 100, 15 Ohio F. Dec. 906, 1861 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJuly 17, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 93 F. 100 (Holmes v. Cleveland, C. & C. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmes v. Cleveland, C. & C. R., 93 F. 100, 15 Ohio F. Dec. 906, 1861 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9 (N.D. Ohio 1861).

Opinion

McLEAN, Circuit Justice.

The complainants claim in this case to he the owners in equity, in common with others, unknown, and too numerous to he made parties if known, of a parcel of land in the city of Cleveland, bounded north by the dividing line between Lake Erie and Canadá and the United States, east by Water street in said city, south by'the north line of lot 191, and west by the Cuyahoga river as it ran in the year 1796, and by a line from its mouth parallel with the east line. They also allege that said land originally belonged to the stockholders of the Connecticut Land Company, which owned the entire Western Reserve, and that they and their heirs are the representatives of such stockholders, and that the lands of the reserve were [102]*102conveyed to mere naked trustees for the benefit of such stockholders; that on March 23,1838, one Thomas Lloyd fraudulently procured a deed from said trustees, conveying the land claimed in this suit, and that defendants are in possession of said lands under a title made from said Lloyd, with notice of the trust and fraud. The prayer of the bill is to set aside said fraudulent deed, dissolve said trust, and have a partition of said land, and an account of the rents and profits thereof received by the defendants.

The defendants insist that the title to all of said land covered by the water of Lake Erie is in the public, and not in any trustee for them; and as to the residue of said land rely for a defense upon the equitable bar furnished by lapse of time, want of title in equity in the complainants, and upon a dedication of said land to the public by the Connecticut Land Company as early as 1798, accepted immediately thereafter, and ever since used in accordance with the purposes of the dedication. They deny that they are in possession under the title derived from said Lloyd, and aver that they are in possession, under the authority of a statute of the state of Ohio, in pursuance of a license granted by the city of Cleveland, and using the same in a manner consistent with the original dedication.

The leading historical facts of this case are believed to be accurately and succinctly stated in the defendants’ brief. The Connecticut Land Company was organized in Connecticut in 1795, and became the owner of the Connecticut Western Reserve, and issued to its stockholders certificates of stock for their respective interests therein. This title was made to the.state of Connecticut by the United States under the act of April 28, 1800, and was vested in trustees for the purpose of partition and conveyance to purchasers. The company caused all its lands east of the Cuyahoga and the Portage Path to be surveyed into townships in the year 1796, and also selected for sale six townships, including the city plot, which were immediately (except the city plot) surveyed into 100-acre lots, and the whole put in market. In the year 1798, by mutual arrangement between the proprietors of said land company, in pursuance of the original association, partition was made of all the company’s lands surveyed as aforesaid except the six townships and the city of Cleveland, and the legal title was secured to the stockholders in severalty. The company, by its agent, continued to control the land in said six townships and the city plot until December, 1802, when, having caused the unsold land thereon to be resurveyed, they in like manner distributed the same among their stockholders, and reserved' the legal title to each, and in said partition avowedly included all that remained unsold in said townships and city.' In April, 1807, they in like manner divided all their land west of the Cuyahoga and the Portage Path. Soon after this, it was discovered that, by reason of omission in the surveys, a small piece of land, not connected with the city or the six townships, had been omitted, and this, called “surplus land,” was surveyed into lots in the city and in the six townships which had been under contract, and become forfeited; whereupon, at a meeting of the stockholders of said company, held according to its constitution, at which they were fully represented, on the 4th January, 1809, if was [103]*103resolved “that the company divide in severalty among the stockholders all their property, consisting of notes, contracts, bonds, and land, according to their plan of partition previously adopted,” and that the partition made should be conclusive upon the proprietors, and “no after-allowances claimed on account of any error that may have happened in cost, measure, or otherwise. But said division shall be final, unless further property belonging to the company he discovered.” The company thereupon proceeded to make the partition, and reserve the title to the stockholders in severalty, as proposed; and thereupon, on the Hh January, 1809, it was voted “that this meeting be adjourned without day.” Up to that time the company kept full records of its proceedings, but since which time there never has been a meeting, either of its directors or stockholders, up to the commencement of this suit.

The first plot, and survey of the city of Cleveland was made in 1796 by Augustus Porter and Seth Peare, who were the authorized surveyors of the Connecticut Land Company, and who superintended the surveys of the entire reserve east of said Portage Path. This survey is called “Peace’s Survey,” and the original field notes and maps are in evidence. On this map was marked “.Bath Street,” connecting Water street with the river, and bounded north by the lake, and south by lot 191, and varies in width from 80 to 200 feet. In describing the lots east, of Water street, the length of the lines above the hank only are given; hut on the map they extend to the lake. In March, 1802, the trustee's of said land company conveyed three of said lots — Nos. 1, 2, and 3 — lying next east of Water street to Samuel Huntington, bounding them on the north by tbe lake. This deed also recognized the lake as the north boundary, and it was also the northern boundary of other lands and lot 191. On December 6, .1.800, the territorial legislature of Ohio passed an act entitled “An act to provide for the recording of town plots,” and in 1801, Turpland Kir Hand, being then the agent of the company, undertook to make a plot of said city, to be made, proved, and recorded as required by that act, the effect of which would be to vest the streets and other public grounds in trust for the purposes therein expressed. Amis Spafford, a surveyor, made a survey of the city, which he called field notes and minutes of the survey of the outlines, lands, and square's of the city, for the land company, in 1796. Both Peare’s and Spafford’s plots and surveys— Peare being the first one — have been recognized from their origin to the present by the members of said land company, and the map of Peare was regularly recorded on the proper record for Trumbull county by the agent of the company. In the year 1833, liiver street, being nearly parallel with the river, was opened, and terminated at Bath street, about 140 feet: distant from the river; and thereafter the latter was used as a thoroughfare from Water street to the river and the lake.

In 1827, the United States, in improving the harbor, cut a new channel for the mouth of the river, running directly north from a point near the northwest: corner of lot 191, and thereby left on tbe west side of the river a small portion of Bath street, — perhaps one-eighth of an acre. Immediately after the construction of the bar[104]*104bór, the accretion commencéd on both sides of the river, and has continued to increase, particularly on the west side, until one-eighth of an acre has increased to seven or eight acres.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 F. 100, 15 Ohio F. Dec. 906, 1861 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-cleveland-c-c-r-ohnd-1861.