Malone v. Jones

100 So. 831, 211 Ala. 461, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 259
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 19, 1924
Docket8 Div. 658.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 100 So. 831 (Malone v. Jones) 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
Malone v. Jones, 100 So. 831, 211 Ala. 461, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 259 (Ala. 1924).

Opinion

GARDNER, J.

The bill in this case was filed by the appellees against the appellant, seeking injunctive relief to restrain the respondent from interfering with the eomplahj- *462 ants’ easement in certain alleged streets in the city of Albany, referred to as Patterson street and Second Avenue West, the latter street being also called Second Avenue West, extended. The original" bill, being submitted to the chancellor upon application for temporary injunction, was set down for hearing after due notice given, as prescribed by the statute, and was submitted for consideration upon the bill which was duly sworn to and affidavits offered, resulting in an order granting the temporary injunction, from which the respondent has prosecuted this appeal.

It appears that on October 27, 1916, the corporation known as the Decatur Land Company, being seized and possessed of the following described property situated in the city of Albany, Ala., sold the same to the complainants under, the following description:

“Beginning at the northeast corner of the intersection of Patterson street with Second Avenue West (extended); running thence^north along the east boundary of Second Avenue West for 68.12 feet to the corporation line of Decatur and New Decatur; thepce east along said corporation line for 130.2 feet to the west margin of First Avenue West (extended); thence south along, the west margin of said First Avenue West (extended) for 70.05 feet to the north margin of Patterson street; thence west along the north margin of Patterson street for 140.56 feet to the point of beginning, containing 23/100 of an acre, more or less, all being and lying the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section eighteen (18) township five (5) south of range four (4) west.’’

The title therefor was duly recorded on December 30, 1916. The Decatur Laud Company owned a fee in the land bounding the land conveyed and designated as Patterson street and Second Avenue West.

It is further alleged that the Decatur Land Company for a long time prior to said sale had in its possession a map or plat of the city of Albany, which it used in the description of the property sold and conveyed by it, on which Patterson street was designated as Second street North; but its name was subsequently changed by the council of New Decatur, Ala. (now Albany) to Patterson 'street, and so, subsequently, designated by the Decatur Land Company. In 1915 a map of the city of Albany was drawn by one Collier, which map was in general use in the city of New Decatur, and was in the office of the various real estate agents of Decatur and New Decatur, a copy of which was kept in the office of the Decatur Land Company, which map designated and defined Patterson street and Second Avenue West as streets, and as bounding the property above described, and that complainants understood that these were streets in the city of New Decatur, now Albany, though they had never been opened by the public authorities as such,; andf ■ further, thát in certain city ordinances certain rights had been granted which appear to recognize the existence of Patterson street and Second Avenue West.

After the purchase of the aforesaid property by complainants, and the recordation of th'eir deed, the Decatur Land Company sold a large tract of land contiguous to the lots sold complainants, which conveyance included Patterson street and Second avenue, where they bound complainants’ property, and respondent by mesne conveyance now claims said property, and is cutting away and grading said streets, and preparing to place a high fence across the same, and thus completely cut off complainants’ access to their property along Patterson street and Second Avenue West, and is disputing the complainants have any right in said street.

It is without dispute that Patterson street and Second Avenue West, which are alleged to bound complainants’ property, have not been opened up as public streets, and consequently have- never been used as such. The conveyance by which the complainants obtained title to this Iqt makes no reference to any map or plat, and; as we read and understand brief of counsel for appellees, it is not insisted that the averments of the bill or the proof contained in the affidavits suffice to show a dedication of Patterson street and Second Avenue West as public streets.

The equity of the bill rests upon the principle found stated by this court in Teasley, Adm’r, v. Stanton, 136 Ala. 641, 33 South. 823, 96 Am. St. Rep. 88, in the following quotation :

“ ‘When a grantor conveys land, bounding it on a way or street, he and his heirs are es-topped to deny that there is such a street or way. This is not descriptive merely, but an implied covenant of the existence of the way,’ and ‘the description of the way, in the deed, as a contemplated passageway, shows the agreement of the parties that there should be such a passageway as distinctly as if it had been already laid out; and has the like effect.’”

This is the generally accepted rule. It is a general rule that, where a conveyance of land calls for a street or alley as a boundary, if the grantor has the fee of the land thus referred to, he is estopped as against his grantee to deny that it is a street,, and an easement therein passes "to the grantee by, implication of law. 9 R. O. L. 766; 7 R. C. L. 1097, note; Powers v. Hefferman, 233 Ill. 597, 84 N. E. 661,16 L. R. A. (N. S.) 523, 122'Am. St. Rep. 216; Hennessey v. Old Colony, etc., R. R. Co., 101 Mass. 540, 100 Am. Dee. 127; Parker v. Smith, 17 Mass. 413, 9 Am. Dec. 157; Am. Steel Foundries v. Soap (C. C. A.) 270 Fed. 70; Tufts v. City of Charlestown, 2 Cray (Mass.) 271; Dill v. Bd. of Education, 47 N. J. Eq. 421, 20 Atl. 739, 10 L. R. A. 276; Talbert v. Mason, 136 Iowa, 373, 113 N. W. 918, 14 L. R. A. (N. S.) 878, 125 Am. St. Rep. 259, *463 and authorities cited in the note. This latter authority points out the necessity that for the application of the principle contended for the grantor must be the owner of the fee in the Jand represented as the street or way, and that the street or way be designated as a boundary.

Counsel for appellant do not controvert the general rule, as above stated, but insist that the instant case comes within some of the exceptions to that rule. That the rule has exceptions is of course well recognized. In Talbert v. Mason, supra, it was stated that, if reference to the street or way is merely a part of the description as a starting point or the termination of a line, this will not suffice because not amounting to the assertion or acceptance of the street or way as a boundary ; and, indeed, an exception, if it may be so .designated, to the rule was recognized in Teasley v. Stanton, supra, where the more particular description by courses or distances in the deed to defendant Stanton disclosed that the description of his lot as bounded on the “reserve” was false, and, being false, no implied covenant could arise therefrom.

None of these exceptions have application to the instant ease. In the deed here under consideration the grantor described the lot as l-unning north along the east boundary of Second Avenue West, and west along the north margin of Patterson street, by which language the implication unavoidably arises that Second Avenue West is an avenue with an east and west boundary, and that Patterson street is a street with a north and south margin.

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Bluebook (online)
100 So. 831, 211 Ala. 461, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malone-v-jones-ala-1924.