Millikin v. Village of Bowling Green

9 Ohio C.C. 493
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedApril 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio C.C. 493 (Millikin v. Village of Bowling Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Millikin v. Village of Bowling Green, 9 Ohio C.C. 493 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

King, J. (orally).

This action was commenced in the Court of Common Pleas of Wood County, and after a trial and judgment, appealed to this court.

The petition alleges that the plaintiff is the owner of lot number 206, Block 30, in the village of Bowling Green, situated at the intersection of Main and Wooster streets, and being eiglity-one (81) feet and three (3) inches on the line of Main street, which runs north and south, and one hundred and sixty-seven (167) feet on the line of Wooster street which runs east and west; and that the authorities of the village are interfering with the plaintiff in his possession of said lot and claiming a portion of it.

The answer admits plaintiff’s ownership of the lot in question, but not of the dimensions claimed, and sets forth [494]*494that the village has occupied a strip of land on the north side thereof, and as a 2>art of Wooster street, seven feet in width. That the same was dedicated by the owner of said lot to the public as a part of said highway forty years ago; ' that ever since the public have used it continuously and adversely to the owners of said lot, and that they have thereby acquired the said highway by prescription and by adverse 2iossession.

These allegations of prescription, adverse j)088688*011 and user are denied in the reply. The evidence makes about this state of facts: That the title to this lot was acquired from the government of the United States by Alfred Thurstin; the date of this conveyance is not given, but the description in the deed to Thurstin is the same as that set forth in the petition of the plaintiff,

That Thurstin and wife conveyed the 2>roperty by that description in 1852 to William Lewis, and William Lewis conveyed to Thomas M. Pike, and he to G. Z. Avery. All of these conveyances were made in 1852. That G. Z. Avery conveyed the itemises in January, 1853, and thereafter various conveyances were made until August 7th, I860, the premises were conveyed to G. Z. Avery again. January 1st, 1807, G. Z. Avery sold and conveyed the premises to Roger Lease, who afterwards conveyed through the medium of a trustee to his wife, and with his wife conveyed the same to Emerine & Macauley on November 30th, 188(5, who were the owners when this action was commenced, but who, while it was pending, on November 3rd, 1894, conveyed to the plaintiff, who was substituted as the plfiintiff in place of the original plaintiffs. These conveyances described the lot and land as described in the 2>etition.

In 1843, the commissioners of Wood County established a county road, which is now known as Wooster street, of the width of sixty feet, and its direction and lines were surveyed and a plat thereof made and the descrÍ2')tion re[495]*495corded. It was a country road through a very sparsely settled region.

About 1855, the village of Bowling Green was incorporated, and in 1852, G. Z. Avery, who is mentioned in the * above enumerated list of conveyances, having purchased this lot, commenced'to build a hotel upon it. There were no fences on either of the road lines at that time as near as can be ascertained from the testimony. Avery commenced to build a hotel 26 by 44 feet, the narrow part abutting on Woosteiqstreet, the long part on Main. He set the north line of this hotel back from the actual line of Wooster street about twelve feet. He says in his testimony that he “calculated to build a platform on the side of the hotel about twelve feet wide, if he kept the property, for the guests of the hotel to occupy as a place to sit when the weather was suitable. ¡That there was no sidewalks in the town at that time. ”

Before the hotel was completed Mr. Avery sold out to a Mr. Thomas, who completed the hotel, and who also built the platform on the north side or end of the hotel about twleve feet in width, and it remained there by renewal or otherwise, of that substantial width, from 1853 until the hotel was burn? ed in 1887 while it was owned by Emerine & Macauley.

At the time of the building of the hotel, and for sometime thereafter, the lot was unfenced, and the west line of the hotel, the longer line, was set back from the east line of Main street about the same distance, and for the same purpose as on Wooster street.

Before Bowling Green was incorporated, the commissioners had under proceedings before them reduced the width of Wooster street to forty feet. After the incorporation of the village some years, an attempt was made to widen Wooster street to its orignal width of sixty feet, and for that purpose the owners were requested to dedicate ten feet on each side which would restore the street to the width it had [496]*496been originally established as a country road; and the owners of property abutting on Wooster street, in this block at least if not in any other, did dedicate the amount of land required, and Wooster street became sixty feet in width as it was orignally established, and this left the north side of the hotel mentioned the distance before, stated, namely, about twelve feet from the south line of Wooster street, and between that line a board walk some twelve feet wide was placed for the convenience of the hotel.

Some years after the hotel was erected, this walk was extended along the balance of the lot to the eastward, generally of the width of six feet, and all of this walk was within the'line of the lot as described by, the deed; and over this walk, which was a board walk, the pirblic have uninterruptedly traveled since it was originally laid, to the present time.

The defendant claims that there was a dedication of this strip of land about six feet in width to the village by the owner in 18»2, Gr. Z. Avery; and if not, that there has been acquired by the public by an uninterrupted use for mere than twenty-one years the title to this strip of land as a street by prescription, and the claim is also insisted upon as stated in the answer that this strip has been acquired for a street by adverse possession.

As I have stated, all of the deeds described the lot, giving its full size, which is eighty-one feet and three inches in width on Main street. If this strip be allowed to the village, it is shown by the plat presented that the strip in question is about six feet and two inches on Main street, and will reduce therefore that line of the. lot to sevent.y-seven feet and one inch.

There is no evidence in the case showing an intention on the part of any of the owners of this lot to dedicate that strip of land to the public use, nor is there any evidence showing that the public, meaning the people who have trav[497]*497eled over- the lot at the places where the sidewalks were built, or the platform which, amounted to a sidewalk, was built, did so with the idea that they were within the proper and established line of the street, or that by such use they were establishing a claim of right to this strip.

The corporate authorities have not exercised any control over the strip, as shown by the testimony. In 1869, an ordinance was passed to widen Main street, and it described this lot as fronting upon it eighty-one feet and three inches in length. The lot owners were requested to dedicate a portion of land on Main street, and the owner of this lot did donate the width required, and described this lot as having a frontage of eighty-one feet and three inches, and the strip of land which he donated as being of that length and of the width of teu feet.

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9 Ohio C.C. 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millikin-v-village-of-bowling-green-ohiocirct-1895.