Johnson v. Town of Watertown

38 A.2d 1, 131 Conn. 84, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 239
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 8, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 38 A.2d 1 (Johnson v. Town of Watertown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Town of Watertown, 38 A.2d 1, 131 Conn. 84, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 239 (Colo. 1944).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The plaintiffs brought this action by writ dated August 11, 1941, against the town, its selectmen and the Cemetery Association, seeking damages and injunctive relief. The plaintiffs own land abutting on a street known as Pine Street, which had been plotted on a map of the tract by its then owners, Budge and Walker, to run from North Street to the land of the Cemetery Association, but which, the plaintiffs contend, had not been improved or accepted as a highway beyond a point some ninety to one hundred feet easterly of the easterly boundary of the cemetery land; and they base their claim for relief upon the fact that the Cemetery Association, without right, entered upon the unimproved portion of the street and prepared a roadway over it to connect its land with the improved portion of the street and that the selectmen permitted this to be done and have been requested but have refused to close the roadway so opened. In the view which we take of the case the fundamental issue raised by the defendants’ answer to the complaint is *86 whether the westerly section of Pine Street became a public highway by dedication.

February 18, 1924, Budge and Walker purchased a parcel of land on the westerly side of North Street in Watertown to develop into building lots for sale. February 29, 1924, they filed in the town clerk’s office a map of the premises prepared for them by surveyor Mackie, showing a street designated as Pine Street fifty feet in width extending from North Street on the east to land of the Cemetery Association on the west, with building lots abutting both sides of it numbered from 1 to 15. After deeds of several lots had been given, the descriptions in which contained the words “as shown on the Mackie map,” civil engineer Lockwood, at Walker’s request, prepared a revised plan of the property dated October, 1925. This showed Pine Street and the fifteen lots substantially as set forth on the Mackie map, the only material change being the reduction of the uniform street width from fifty to forty-nine and one-half feet. This map was filed in the town clerk’s office February 3, 1926, and was approved by the selectmen February 6, 1926. At this time the extreme westerly portion of Pine Street was not improved or used for highway purposes but was rough farm land with bushes and one or more apple trees on it and across it at the west end was a row of Scotch pines with a wire fence just beyond on the cemetery’s easterly line. Shortly after this map was filed Walker had Lockwood install a stone marker at each of the four corners of Pine Street as shown on the map, the two at its westerly end being in the easterly line of the cemetery’s land. None of these has since been changed. Budge and Walker requested that the town accept Pine Street as a public highway as laid out on the Lockwood map. Pursuant thereto, one purpose stated in the call for the annual town *87 meeting to be held on October 5, 1925, was “to take action on the layout of a public highway in Watertown to run westerly from North Street known as Pine Street.” At this meeting it was voted that the selectmen “investigate the matter of accepting Pine Street” and report to an adjourned meeting. At that meeting, held on March 1, 1926, the selectmen made their report and it was voted “that Pine Street ... be accepted.”

The plaintiff Johnson is the owner of two lots on the south side of Pine Street, lot 15 abutting the cemetery land on the west and lot 14 adjoining lot 15 on the east. The plaintiff Kopp owns four lots on the opposite side of the street, lot 8 abutting the cemetery’s land on the west and the adjoining lots 7, 6 and 5 situated next east. The four deeds by which title was conveyed to these owners were given between March 1, 1926, and December 3, 1938. The earliest deed, that of March 1, 1926, described the property conveyed as “bounded north on Pine Street, a proposed highway,” and the other three, as “bounded on Pine Street a public highway.” Each of the deeds describes the lots “as shown on the Lockwood map.” Similar wording was contained in the deeds of other lots in the tract given during this period. No part of Pine Street has been taxed since March 1, 1926. Between February 18, 1924, and August 1, 1940, Budge and Walker graded and surface-hardened Pine Street and also installed curbs and concrete sidewalks on both sides from North Street to within ninety to one hundred feet of the easterly line of the cemetery land, extending the work westerly from time to time as called for by the construction of houses on the abutting lots. By their acts and conduct above recited, Budge and Walker intended to offer and dedicate Pine Street as outlined on the Lockwood map for use as a public highway.

*88 In 1924 the Watertown Fire District laid a water main through Pine Street to a point seventy feet east of the easterly line of the cemetery land and this main thereafter served the houses on the street; in 1936 it installed an eight-inch sanitary sewer to within thirty-five feet of that line. The then owners of lots 7, 8, 14 and 15 paid assessments against their respective lots therefor. Since March 1, 1926, the town has kept the hard-surfaced portion of Pine Street reasonably safe and convenient for public travel, and ever since that date persons having occasion to go to and from the six houses on the street have used it for that purpose. The westerly section was not graded or surface-hardened nor did it have sidewalks or curbs since no house had been built on the abutting lots. In connection with the installation of the sewer with a catch basin at its westerly end and of the water main, however, the trees, grass, shrubs and other growth were removed from a large part of this section and the surface involved was made smooth and available for vehicular and pedestrian travel. The section has been used as a playground, for the parking and turning of vehicles, and for servicing the water and sewer pipes. Its use for access to and from Pine Street for lots 7, 8 and 15 is necessary, though no house has as yet been built on any of these lots.

Prior to August 1, 1940, no objection was made by any one to the use of Pine Street or any part of it as a highway, nor did any one exercise any act of ownership incompatible therewith. On or about August 1, 1940, the Cemetery Association removed three of the pine trees and the old wire fence on the boundary between its land and Pine Street, opening up a space twenty feet wide for travel from a roadway on its land to Pine Street. Although this was done without the consent of the defendant selectmen, they refused *89 to restore the situation to the former condition, as requested by the plaintiff Johnson, and about ten months later oiled and graveled this twenty-foot strip of land. All the foregoing facts have been found by the court and they are not subject to correction in any respect materially affecting the issues.

One of the court’s conclusions was that “Pine Street as outlined on the Lockwood map was dedicated by Budge and Walker for public highway purposes, and was accepted as such by the vote adopted at the meeting of the legal voters of the Town of Watertown held March 1, 1926, and by the use thereof by the unorganized public as a public highway from March 1, 1926, to and until August 1, 1940.” The plaintiffs do not seriously question that there was an effective dedication of all of Pine Street with the exception of its westerly portion.

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Bluebook (online)
38 A.2d 1, 131 Conn. 84, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-town-of-watertown-conn-1944.