Ledlow v. City of Pell City

497 So. 2d 86, 1986 Ala. LEXIS 3958
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedAugust 29, 1986
Docket84-1346
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 497 So. 2d 86 (Ledlow v. City of Pell City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ledlow v. City of Pell City, 497 So. 2d 86, 1986 Ala. LEXIS 3958 (Ala. 1986).

Opinion

STEAGALL, Justice.

The appellants are owners of cemetery lots within sector “A” of Valley Hill Memorial Gardens cemetery (hereinafter “Valley Hill cemetery”) in Pell City. The appellants named the following as defendants: (1) Valley Hill Memorial Gardens, Inc., the owner of Valley Hill cemetery; (2) the city of Pell City; (3) the mayor and councilmen of Pell City; and (4) Gerald and Dorothy Ensley, the owners of a tract of land lying south of and contiguous to Valley Hill cemetery.. Appellants claim that the property held by the Ensleys was dedicated as a cemetery prior to the Ensleys’ purchase of the property in 1982. The trial court held that the Ensley tract was never dedicated as a cemetery, but the court granted all Valley Hill cemetery lot holders a 20-foot easement for ingress and egress and turnaround purposes across the northern side of the Ensley tract. We affirm.

Valley Hill Memorial Gardens, Inc. (the cemetery corporation), is a private corporation which was organized for profit in the year 1970. The purposes of the corporation included not only owning, operating, and maintaining a cemetery, but also, within a broad business authority, transacting any other kind of business.

At the time of the filing of the complaint and at the time of trial, the sole stockholder and president of the cemetery corporation was Margaret M. Nixon. The original incorporators of the cemetery corporation acquired title in 1970 to a tract of land consisting of slightly over 25 acres in Pell City, Alabama. A complete chain of title was introduced into evidence showing numerous transactions that occurred following the original purchase by the cemetery corporation.

Shortly following the acquisition of the tract by the corporation, a portion of the tract was developed as a cemetery. In 1970, the original cemetery management employed an engineer, Harold E. Smithson, who laid out a portion of the tract known as sector “A.” All of the original incorpo-rators executed a map known as sector “A,” thereby dedicating the sector as a cemetery. The map contained approximately 2400 grave lots and consisted of approximately 2.8 acres of the 25-acre tract acquired originally.

The undisputed testimony was that from the year 1970 to the date of trial, some 15 years later, approximately 500 cemetery lots or grave sites in sector “A” had been sold to various members of the public and that numerous interments had occurred in sector “A.” It was also undisputed that there had been no interments whatsoever in any portion of the original 25-acre tract other than sector “A.” A perpetual care fund had been established by the cemetery corporation as a result of the lot sales in sector “A” and the corporation had maintained sector “A” as a cemetery. An access road was developed along the south side of sector “A,” extending from U.S. Highway 231 in an easterly direction to an older cemetery located on the east side of the original 25-acre tract.

Appellants contend that the access road as presently existing is insufficient to afford a reasonable access to sector “A” because vehicular traffic cannot turn around without traversing on portions of the original 25-acre tract lying south of sector “A,” which is where the Ensley tract is located. Appellants contend that portions of the tract acquired by the Ensleys constitute dedicated portions of Valley Hill cemetery known as sectors “B” and “C.”

In 1978, the cemetery corporation employed a surveyor, Darrell Luker, to make a preliminary layout of an additional tract of land lying south of sector “A,” which is the area appellants call sectors “B” and “C.” Luker marked off and staked additional lots in sectors “B” and “C.” The map prepared by Luker was never executed by anyone associated with the cemetery corporation, as was done with the map of sector “A.” There was no evidence that anyone other than Luker had a copy of the map. The testimony is in dispute as to whether any member of the public bought a lot in sector “A” in reliance upon the map prepared by Luker. There was no testimony that a conveyance was ever made of a [88]*88cemetery lot outside sector “A.” There was testimony that contracts to purchase purported lots in sectors “B” and “C” had been executed by at least two purchasers, but that prior to paying the full purchase price and receiving deeds, they accepted cemetery lots in sector “A” in exchange. It appears from the evidence that no cemetery deeds were ever executed in regard to any portion of the property other than sector “A.”

There was considerable evidence that around the same time the cemetery corporation had preliminary layouts of sectors “B” and “C” prepared, it proceeded to sell portions of the original 25-acre tract for commercial purposes. In fact, portions of the original 25-acre tract of land had been sold, as indicated by the chain of title introduced into evidence, with at least two commercial buildings being located on the property at the time of the trial. In March 1978, the cemetery corporation conveyed a 10-acre tract of land to Everett Nixon. Thereafter, Nixon conveyed the same 10 acres to Margaret M.- Nixon. Margaret Nixon conveyed a portion of this 10 acres to Dr. Larkin P. DeShazer on January 2, 1979, and another portion to The Peoples Bank on February 7, 1980. A commercial building has been constructed on the De-Shazer tract. On September 17, 1981, the cemetery corporation conveyed another portion of the original 25-acre tract to Margaret Nixon. She reconveyed this tract to Dennis Abbott on the same date. A commercial building has also been constructed on this tract. On September 30, 1982, the cemetery corporation conveyed the last parcel of the original 25-acre tract (except the cemetery in sector “A”) to Margaret Nixon. This tract was purchased by the appellees, Gerald and Dorothy Ensley, on September 30, 1982, and is the subject of this dispute. Prior to the sale of the Ensley tract, the property had been offered for sale to the public as commercial property. Evidence was presented that a large “for sale” sign had been placed on the property, that it had been listed with one or more realtors in Pell City for many months, and that it was well known in the community that the property was available for sale for commercial purposes. The Ensleys purchased the property subject to its being rezoned in order for them to build a shopping center on it. On September 24, 1984, the city council of Pell City rezoned the Ensley property from “residence” and “agriculture” to “general business.”

Because the evidence was presented to the court ore tenus, its findings of fact are presumed to be correct and they will not be disturbed on appeal unless plainly and palpably wrong and not supported by the evidence. Etheridge v. Yeager, 465 So.2d 378 (Ala.1985).

Appellants contend that in 1970 there was a common law dedication of the entire 25-acre tract as a public cemetery. The dedication of property as a public cemetery requires an intention to devote the property to the public at large over a continuous period of time. Garland v. Clark, 264 Ala. 402, 88 So.2d 367 (1956). Dedication may also be proven by use of the property as a cemetery for an extended period of time with the owner’s consent or acquiescence, and in Alabama 20 years is usually the required period. Garland v. Clark, supra.

In Magnolia Memorial Gardens, Inc. v. Denton, 317 So.2d 38 (Miss.1975), the Mississippi Supreme Court held that not all of the original 60 acres purchased by a cemetery corporation had been dedicated as a public cemetery. In the Magnolia

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Bluebook (online)
497 So. 2d 86, 1986 Ala. LEXIS 3958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ledlow-v-city-of-pell-city-ala-1986.