Insurance Co. v. . Carolina Beach

7 S.E.2d 13, 216 N.C. 778, 1940 N.C. LEXIS 387
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 2, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 7 S.E.2d 13 (Insurance Co. v. . Carolina Beach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Insurance Co. v. . Carolina Beach, 7 S.E.2d 13, 216 N.C. 778, 1940 N.C. LEXIS 387 (N.C. 1940).

Opinion

Civil action to recover land and remove cloud upon title.

Plaintiffs in their complaint substantially allege that they are the owners of a specifically described strip of land nineteen feet wide on the east side of Lake Park Boulevard, as a street eighty feet wide, between Cape Fear Boulevard on the south and Harper Avenue on the north, within the corporate limits of the town of Carolina Beach, North Carolina; that in the year 1913 between the first of June and the first of *Page 780 September the New Hanover Transit Company, a corporation, from whom plaintiffs derived title by mesne conveyances, owning in fee simple a boundary of land then unincorporated, but on which the town of Carolina Beach is now situated, caused a map thereof to be prepared, platting same into lots and streets; that this map was not registered until 13 April, 1928, when it was recorded in Map Book 2, page 133, in the office of the register of deeds of New Hanover County; that one of the streets laid down on said map, Lake Park Boulevard, was shown to be of the width of ninety-nine feet, including the strip of land in question, but that same was never actually located upon the ground; that New Hanover Transit Company sold a few lots with reference to said map, but that no one of the lots so sold fronted on said boulevard, but in the main were east of it.

Plaintiffs further allege that prior to January, 1916, the New Hanover Transit Company caused said map to be revised by cutting off nineteen feet of Lake Park Boulevard as originally platted, thereby reducing it to eighty feet in width; that the map so revised was registered on 12 July, 1916, in Map Book 2, page 1, in the office of said register of deeds, and that later a copy of same was registered in said Map Book 2, page 106; that thereafter all lot owners, who had acquired lots from the New Hanover Transit Company according to the previous plan, and the public generally, accepted and treated the map so revised as the correct plan of Carolina Beach; that those purchasers of lots previously acquired acquiesced in said revised plan and claimed their lots according to it; that numerous lots were sold with reference to the map recorded on Map Book 2, page 1, to various purchasers, who relied upon same as correctly representing the location of lots, streets and avenues platted thereon.

Plaintiffs further allege that on 4 May, 1935, "New Hanover Transit Company, pursuant to the provision of section 3846 (rr) of the Consolidated Statutes of North Carolina, caused to be recorded in the office of the register of deeds of New Hanover County . . . a notice of a declaration that Lake Park Boulevard as it appeared upon the map or drawing first above mentioned as a 99-foot street or highway had not been accepted or used for a period of twenty years, and that the tract of land hereinbefore described as now belonging to the plaintiffs was withdrawn as a boulevard or highway of 99 feet in width and that the dedication thereof had never been accepted."

Plaintiffs further allege that the town of Carolina Beach was created and exists under and by virtue of an act of the Legislature, chapter 117, Private Laws 1925, as amended by chapter 195, Private Laws 1927, and chapter 188, Private Laws 1933. *Page 781

Plaintiffs further allege that on 21 May, 1935, the board of aldermen of the town of Carolina Beach passed a resolution declaring Lake Park Boulevard to be eighty feet in width; and that the eastern nineteen feet strip of the ninety-nine feet originally platted as a part of said boulevard is not in fact a part thereof; but that on 5 July, 1935, the board of aldermen adopted another resolution, fully set forth in the complaint, in which, after reciting that the resolution of 21 May, 1935, was adopted under a misapprehension of facts, rescinded the same, and declared "that said Lake Park Boulevard be held by the said town as a 99-foot street as originally dedicated as shown on map as recorded in Map Book 2, page 133," and that the strip of land nineteen feet in width, specifically described, eliminated in former resolution, "be and the same is hereby declared to be a part of the said Lake Park Boulevard."

Plaintiffs further allege that defendant town of Carolina Beach is now claiming that the strip of land in question by virtue of the map dated June-September, 1913, and the law of North Carolina, was and is dedicated and belongs to defendant as a part of its street, or is held by the plaintiffs subject to an easement and vested right which the defendant claims to have to use said strip as a part of Lake Park Boulevard, and that said claim and map are a cloud upon their title which they are entitled to have removed to the end that they may be able to sell and use said lot as owners thereof, freed and discharged of any public servitude.

Plaintiffs further allege that upon obtaining deed including the strip of land in question, on 7 February, 1927, they took actual physical possession of the strip in question and erected on the eastern boundary of Lake Park Boulevard as shown on the map recorded in Map Book 2, page 106, as eighty feet wide, a line of posts to prevent the use thereof as a street, and that defendant wrongfully and unlawfully trespassed and removed said posts, and has endeavored to incorporate said strip of land as a boulevard to their damage.

Plaintiffs further allege that by reason of the acts and things alleged in the complaint the defendants and the public generally and all property owners within the corporate limits of the defendant town are estopped to claim that Lake Park Boulevard is ninety-nine feet wide.

Defendant in answer filed denies that plaintiffs are the owners of the strip of land in question, and avers that same was dedicated by the New Hanover Transit Company as a part of the public street designated as Lake Park Boulevard. Defendant denies that the map registered in Map Book 2, page 1, purported copy of which is registered on Map Book 2, page 106, has the effect of reducing the width of Lake Park Boulevard to eighty feet, and further avers that the attempted reduction of said boulevard was not authorized by the board of directors of the New Hanover Transit Company. Defendant further denies that the *Page 782 registered written instrument which by its terms purports to revoke the dedication therein said to have been made by the New Hanover Transit Company in June-September, 1913, is effective for the purpose indicated, and denies that the town of Carolina Beach has not recognized and exercised dominion and control over the street and each part thereof of the width of ninety-nine feet.

The defendant further avers that the board of aldermen was without authority to pass the resolution of 21 May, 1935, and acted under a misapprehension of existing facts, and that all declarations in said resolution purporting to reduce the width of Lake Park Boulevard from ninety-nine feet to eighty feet are void and of no effect, and were rescinded by the resolution of 5 July, 1935.

Defendant, while admitting its claim to the strip of land in question as a part of Lake Park Boulevard, a public street in the town of Carolina Beach, denies that plaintiff has any right, title, interest or estate in and to the same. Defendant further denies all other material allegations.

Defendant further avers that in two civil actions, one Carolina Beach Corporation and Town of Carolina Beach v. J. R. Bame et al., at the March Term, 1929, and the other Pate Hotel Company, Inc., v. Town of Carolina Beach, October Term, 1934, it was adjudged that the Lake Park Boulevard had been dedicated as a street ninety-nine feet in width, and same are pleaded in bar of this action.

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.E.2d 13, 216 N.C. 778, 1940 N.C. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insurance-co-v-carolina-beach-nc-1940.