James v. MacDonald

7 Conn. Super. Ct. 135, 7 Conn. Supp. 135, 1939 Conn. Super. LEXIS 53
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedApril 24, 1939
DocketFile 52415
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 135 (James v. MacDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James v. MacDonald, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 135, 7 Conn. Supp. 135, 1939 Conn. Super. LEXIS 53 (Colo. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

MUNGER, J.

The plaintiff is the owner of land consisting of two parcels in the town of Fairfield. One parcel, herein' after called the south piece, is located at the southeast corner of Main Street and Pequot Road. The other, herein called the north piece, is located at the northeast corner of Rose Hill Road and Main Street. By a survey and map dated October 30, 1936, the defendant has reestablished and located boundaries of the highway known as Pequot Road on the west side of the plaintiff’s property.

The action of the defendant has been taken pursuant to sec' tion 530c of the Cumulative Supplement to the General Statutes (1935). This section provides that the highway commissioner, if the boundary lines or limits of any state aid or trunk line highway shall have become lost or uncertain, “may reestablish such boundary lines or limits as, in his opinion, they were or' iginally established.” The statute further provides that the boundaries so defined may be changed by the Superior Court on appeal, and further provides: “If said commissioner shall be unable to prove the location of any such boundaries or limits, he may purchase or condemn such right of way over land ad' joining the traveled portion of the highway as shall, in his opin' ion, be necessary for highway purposes. .. . ” The map made by the defendant to establish the conclusions reached from the survey is plaintiff’s Exhibit A. The lines of the highway as established by the defendant are shown on this map by the heavy broken line.

The plaintiff bought the south parcel in 1927 and thereafter erected a building for stores fronting on the highway. At the time he purchased the land there were visible evidences of the boundary line of the highway consisting of an old fence with posts. This fence the plaintiff took down and erected his build' ing ten feet to the east of the line of the old fence. He there' upon constructed a sidewalk in front of this building some 67 feet in length from north to south. The building is used for stores. The sidewalk ends at the north of the highway. On the south it adjoins another sidewalk running along the property adjoining one Russell. So far as appears it is a continuous sidewalk along the east side of Pequot Road and fronting the *137 various properties on the east of the highway. The line of the-old fence with posts is a line which would be some two feet to the west of the curb line of this sidewalk. The defendant in locating the easterly boundary line of the highway ran his-line along the face of the plaintiffs building and it is claimed that if the evidence of an old boundary did in fact indicate that the plaintiff’s land ran some ten feet further to the west that the land had been abandoned by him and dedicated to the public. The defendant therefore insists that upon the clear evidence of dedication the east boundary line of the highway is correctly shown on Exhibit A.

It is apparent from an inspection of the map, if we begin at a point marked “highway boundary stone with figures 168-degrees, ten minutes”, that the highway boundary line as fixed' by the defendant turns at an angle and runs along the face of the plaintiff’s building or the inner line of the sidewalk from the dot labelled B.P. on said map. From this dot B.P. at the end of the line marking the inner face of the sidewalk with the figures 32.9 degrees, the defendant has drawn a straight line substantially to the north and projected it across the highway to a point in the map marked B.P., as indicated directly in front of the word “walk” and the east boundary of the highway has then been run by the defendant to the other dot B.P., the same being the line as indicatéd on said map 54.35.

The defendant mainly relies, as far as the south piece is concerned, for the boundary line which has been established, upon the fact of dedication by the plaintiff. This is very much to-his advantage so far as the south piece is concerned and seems decidedly to his disadvantage as concerns the north piece; for the reliance upon dedication is the only reason why the east boundary of the highway has been measured and fixed as the inside line of the sidewalk as it now stands, that is, along the face of the plaintiff’s building.

I think the evidence fairly shows a dedication by the plaintiff of this strip. The plaintiff testified that he moved back ten feet to the east from the correct highway line in order to conform to the zoning ordinances of the town in erecting his building. The sidewalk is eight feet wide. He further testified that the sidewalk was for the purpose of allowing customers to gain access to the stores. His testimony, however, was explicit that very much more than this was the effect of his construction of the walk and the only reasonable conclusion that *138 can be drawn is that a dedication was intended and that an implied dedication must be found.

The plaintiff testified as follows:

“Q — Is there another sidewalk extending from this sidewalk in a southerly direction? A — That is Russell’s.
Q — There is a sidewalk? A — Yes.
Q — Another sidewalk there? A — Yes.
Q — So both sidewalks are used for people going along the ■street and into the stores? A — Yes.
Q — The cars park along there, automobiles park there and people go into the store? A — They do sometimes.
Q — And all the time the sidewalk has been built people have been using it up and down for every purpose they might want to? A — Yes.” '

This unequivocal statement of the plaintiff in my opinion, together with the character of the walk as forming a continuous passage on the highway along the east side of Pequot Road, together with the other testimony does not, as before stated, afford ground for any other reasonable conclusion than that of ■dedication. As to this piece, therefore, it must be found that the defendant has correctly proceeded in establishing the east boundary of the highway along the plaintiff’s property. La Chappelle vs. Jewett City, 121 Conn. 381.

Quite a different conclusion must be reached with respect to the north piece. , It does not indeed appear that the property of the plaintiff along which the defendant has established the east boundary of the highway is in fact a state aid or trunk line highway. It seems to be conceded that Pequot Road is a highway over which the defendant by law has jurisdiction. An inspection of Exhibit A fails to show that the north piece of plaintiff’s property is bounded on the west by Pequot Road but it appears rather that it is bounded by Main Street, and it is not claimed that Main Street is a state aid or trunk highway.

If, however, it is assumed that the north piece of plaintiff’s property does face on Pequot Road, then I can see no ground for holding that the line as drawn by the defendant is an accurate designation from anything that resembles proof. As before stated, the east line of the highway upon the map as drawn by the defendant turns at an angle at a place marked *139

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Related

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7 Conn. Super. Ct. 430 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
7 Conn. Super. Ct. 135, 7 Conn. Supp. 135, 1939 Conn. Super. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-macdonald-connsuperct-1939.