Mayor & City Council of Baltimore v. Gordon

104 A. 536, 133 Md. 150, 1918 Md. LEXIS 119
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 20, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 104 A. 536 (Mayor & City Council of Baltimore v. Gordon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor & City Council of Baltimore v. Gordon, 104 A. 536, 133 Md. 150, 1918 Md. LEXIS 119 (Md. 1918).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

When Harry Dorsey Gough died in 1808 he was seized in fee, among other property, of a lot on the west side of Front street, in Baltimore City, having a front of 140 feet, and extending back westerly an approximate depth of 150 feet to Jones Falls. This lot lay just to the south of Billingsgate street, as it was then called, now known as Low street.

Proceedings for a partition of Mr. Gough’s real estate were begun in the High Court of Chancery in 181J, and the return of the Commissioners was filed about eighteen months later. By it there was allotted to James Carroll, Jr., a portion of the Front street property, fronting 46 feet 1 inch on Front street, “by a depth of 125 feet to an alley 25 feet wide left on Jones Falls for the mutual accommodation of this and adjoining lots.”

By the same return there was allotted to Charles B.' Carroll a house and lot on Front street, immediately adjoining that allotted to James Carroll, Jr., and which had a front on Front street of 93 feet 11 inches, with a depth of 125 feet “to a 25 foot alley left on Jones Falls for the mutual accommodation of this and the adjoining lot.” These two lots taken together thus exhausted the entire amount of real estate of *152 Mr. Gough’s on Front street. The space referred to as an alley in the allotment remained an open space along the side of the Falls, which could be entered from Low street, but was closed at the other end by property adjoining’ to the south, which ran through from Front street to the Falls.

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The present litigation grows out of an attempt by the Mayor and City Ctouneil of Baltimore, through the passage of an ordinance, to close this space as being a public alley, which is resisted by the abutting owners, who claim title in themselves by virtue of various mesne conveyances from James Carroll, Jr., and Charles R. Carroll.

A bill was filed by the plaintiffs as owners asking, an injunction, which by the decree of the Circuit 'Court of Baltimore Oity was granted, enjoining the Mayor and Oity Council from proceeding under the ordinance. The question thus is one of dedicatión to the public, and the acceptance by the municipal *153 authorities of such dedication of this strip of ground, referred to as an alley, as a public highway.

To sustain the City’s claim and contention it must be found that there was an intent to dedicate to public use on the part of the owner of the property, and that such intent was clearly manifested, and that the same was accepted by the City.

“There is no such thing as a dedication between the owner and individuals, the public must be a party to every dedication. It is the essence of a dedication to public uses, that it shall be for the use of the public at large. There may be a dedication of land for special uses, but it shall be for the benefit of the public and not for any particular part of it. * * * The grant by the owner of a private right of way over his land to buyers of different parcels of the same to furnish them with convenient access to the street is no dedication to public use.” 8 R. C. L. 888, 9; Thomas v. Ford, 63 Md. 346.

The intent requisite to constitute a, dedication can not be inferred from a plat, by placing on it names which import a private use, as readily as a public use. Pella v. Scholte, 24 Iowa, 283.

And what the character of the evidence of the intent must be, was clearly stated by Judge Miller, in Pitts v. Balti more, 73 Md. 326, when he said: “It has been decided by this Court in a number of oases that in order to make out a dedication, an intent on the part of the owner to dedicate his land to the particular use alleged is absolutely essential, and unless such intention is clearly proved by the facts and circumstances of the particular case, no dedication exists.” And for this he cites the cases of White v. Flannigain, 1 Md. 539; Moale v. Baltimore, 5 Md. 314; McCormick v. Baltimore, 45 Md. 512; Tinges v. Baltimore, 51 Md. 600; Hall v. Baltimore, 56 Md. 187; Baltimore v. White, 62 Md. 362 and Glenn v. Baltimore, 67 Md. 390.

To support the contention of the City reliance is , placed upon two facts, which will be considered in the light of the rules of law applicable to- such eases. These are:

*154 1st. The description in the return of the Commissioners which called for a depth of one hundred and twenty-five feet to an alley twenty-five feet wide, and

2nd. “Poppleton’s Plat.”

Taping these up in inverse order, the effect to be given to Poppleton’s Plat has been passed upon by this Court in Baltimore v. Bouldin, 23 Md. 328, and Baltimore v. Hook, 62 Md. 371, under which it was distinctly held, that the laying down of a street upon that plat was not sufficient to avoid condemnation proceedings, in cases where there had been no dedication. But apart from these positive adjudications the situation is this: The appointment of a commission to make the partition of Ml. Gough’s estate, and the act of the Legislature giving authority to John E. Howard and others as Commissioners, to have a plan of the City prepared, both took place in the same year. The return of the commissioners for the partition was some years earlier than the filing of Poppleton’s Plat. There do not appear from the Record to have been any legislative acts with reference to the plat subsequent to the time of its being filed, nor could the laying out of a street upon that plat operate as a dedication, without the consent of the owner or owners, where there had been no prior dedication of the land.

With regard to a dedication resulting from the description in the partition proceedings, that can stand in no better position. It is perfectly true that the call is for a depth of one hundred and twenty-five feet to a twenty-five foot alley, but it is equally true that by the very terms of that call, the alley was one left, not for the use of the public generally, but was specially- restricted to the use of the lot or lots carved out of the land of Mr. Gough which should bound thereon. Thus instead of a clearly proved intent to dedicate this alley to public use, it is limited to the use of the owners of the abutting land of which Mr. Gough died seized.

There is another circumstance which in many of the adjudicated cases has been regarded as negativing the purpose to *155 dedicate. The alley called for in the partition proceedings had no outlet to the south, and thus formed a cvl de sac, as it is commonly called. As early as 1813 Loud Chief Justice Mansfield, in the case of Woodyear v. Hadden, 5 Taunt. 126, had a similar situation presented.

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Bluebook (online)
104 A. 536, 133 Md. 150, 1918 Md. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-city-council-of-baltimore-v-gordon-md-1918.