Lindauer v. Hill

1953 OK 141, 262 P.2d 697, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 569
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 5, 1953
Docket35512
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 1953 OK 141 (Lindauer v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindauer v. Hill, 1953 OK 141, 262 P.2d 697, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 569 (Okla. 1953).

Opinion

DAVISON, Justice.

By this suit, the plaintiffs, W. A. Hill, and some eighty-nine others, sought to enjoin the defendant, Loyd Lindauer, from enclosing, and stopping the public use of, an alleged street in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court, being inversely to their appearance here.

On November 22, 1905, Francis M. Jordan and his wife, Rachel M. Jordan, the owners of a tract of land on the eastern border of Oklahoma City, platted the same into lots and blocks and certified the plat thereof, dedicating the streets and alleys to public use and designating the tract as “Jordan Place Addition.” In the extreme southeast corner was block numbered 14,.. which was some 800 feet wide, east and west, and 290 feet deep, north and south.

An alley 20 feet wide ran through the entire block dividing it into a north half and south half, each containing 32 lots 25 feet wide and 135 feet deep. The block was bounded on the north by “Eighth Street”; on the south, by “Seventh Street.”

Previously, on April 22, 1903, the Jor-dans had platted this same addition and had certified the plat and dedicated the streets and alleys. On that first plat, running north and south between Seventh and Eighth streets at about the center of what was subsequently designated “Block 14” on' the second plat, was “Beveridge Avenue,.” Before any lots had been sold, the Jordans executed and filed a vacation of the first or earlier plat.

On the second plat (of 1905), there was no Beveridge Avenue, and the land, which had therefore been so designated, was platted as lots 19, 20, 45 and 46 of said block 14. They comprised the piece of land here involved. On November 24, 1905, two days after the certification of the second plat, the Jordans conveyed blocks 10, 11, 12, and 14 by warranty deed to Mary A. B. Adams. On March 27, 1908, the said Mary A. B. Adams, by warranty deed, conveyed to Oklahoma City.

“Lots nineteen (19), Twenty (20), Forty Five (45) and Forty Six (46) in Block Fourteen (14) in Jordan Place Addition to Oklahoma City. Said lots are to be used for street purposes only, it being the intention of this deed to donate said lots for purposes as fully and to the-same effect as if said street had been marked and designated by the original plat * * *.”

By the public generally, the parcel of land described in said deed to the city was known and referred to as Wisconsin Avenue and was used as a street. On November 18, 1930, the city, by ordinance, vacated “Wisconsin Avenue from the North Line of Seventh Street to the South Line of Eighth Street.” On May 24, 1938, the city executed a quitclaim deed, covering “Lots 19, 20, 45 and 46 in Block 14, Jordan Place Addition, etc.” to Hattie. E. Hinchee. There were also put in evidence in the trial below, other quitclaim deeds thereto to Hattie E. Hinchee, - purportedly from the *699 heirs of the above named Mary A. B. Adams. On August 8, 1950, the said Hattie E. Hinchee executed a quitclaim deed covering said lots to the defendant herein, Loyd Lindauer. Shortly before the filing of plaintiffs’ petition herein on October 12, 1951, the defendant inclosed the real estate in question by the construction of a wire fence along the boundary lines between the lots and Seventh Street, and between the lots and Eighth Street. Plaintiffs filed this suit seeking an injunction prohibiting the barricading of the alleged Wisconsin Avenue by defendant and a mandatory injunction requiring the removal ■ of the fences already constructed. The trial court found for plaintiffs, granting the relief prayed for, from which judgment, defendant has appealed.

The original platting of the land, the original dedication of the streets and_ alleys and the subsequent vacation, of the plat have little if any bearing on the rights of the parties here. The deed from Adams to Oklahoma City, referred to above, constituted a dedication of the lots here involved “for street purposes.” “The most definite form of dedication is by a deed setting forth the exact purposes for which the land is conveyed.” 16 Am.Jur. 364.

Defendant, in asserting his alleged right to enclose the strip of land involved, relies upon title thereto. His claim of title is founded upon conveyances from the heirs of Mary A. B. Adams and from Oklahoma City. Those' from the Adams heirs were effective to convey only what title, if any, remained in the said Mary A. B. Adams after the execution and delivery of her deed of March 27, 1908, to Oklahoma City. In the case of McClain v. Oklahoma City, 192 Okl. 4, 133 P.2d 198, 200, this court held “that a clause in a deed to a municipality reciting- that the property is conveyed for street or other public purposes does, not qualify or limit the estate”, citing and approving the rule contained in 47 A.L.R. 1174 note, wherein it was stated as follows:

“ * * * the mere recital in a deed, or other instrument,- that the land' is conveyed for cemetery purposes, does not operate' as a condition subsequent for a breach of which, by use of the land for other purposes, the grantors or his heirs would be entitled to reenter. * * *” (Citing cases from many jurisdictions.)

Thus, after the deed to' the city was executed, no title or estate remained in the grantor Adams and. neither defendant nor his grantors obtained anything by the subsequent conveyances from her heirs.

We turn now to the effect of the vacation of the street by the city and the deed executed by said City to Hinchee.. Although the title held by the city was a fee title, it was not held in a proprietary capacity. “The general rule is that in the absence of a statute to the contrary .the title to streets and alleys is held by the municipality in trust for the public, ’ not in a proprietary capacity, and the municipality is without power to alienate the same.” Town of Chouteau v. Blankenship, 194 Okl. 401, 152 P.2d 379, 383, 171 A.L.R. 87.

By section 659, 11 O.S.1941, it is provided “that whenever any street, avenue, alley or lane shall be vacated, the same shall revert to 'the owners or (of) real estate thereto adjacent, * * *.” In construing that section of the statutes this court has consistently held ^hat,

“Upon the - vacation of a street or alley the land to the center thereof attaches to and becomes a part of adjoining lots and blocks. 11 O.S.1-941 § 659. * * * ” Askins v. British-American Oil Producing Co., 201 Okl. 209, 203 P.2d 877, 878.

This brings us to the conclusion that the deed from Adams to Oklahoma City conveyed the entire fee title but, because the property was conveyed for street purposes, the city became the owner in trust for the public not in a proprietary capacity. Upon vacation of the street, the land attached to the adjoining lots and the city then owned nothing which could pass by the quitclaim deed to Hinchee, even if it had authority to convey, which it did not. Therefore the defendant had no title or estate in the property, nor right to erect the barricades.

The city could not, by vacating the property as a street, destroy the rights of the individuals to use the same if those *700 rights had accrued or were inherent in the ownership of adjacent lots. The effect of the vacation of a street by a city was well described in the case of Texas Co. v. Texarkana Mach.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1953 OK 141, 262 P.2d 697, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindauer-v-hill-okla-1953.