Mount Union College v. Mistelski

22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 504
CourtStark County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 1, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 504 (Mount Union College v. Mistelski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Stark County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mount Union College v. Mistelski, 22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 504 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1917).

Opinion

Day, J.

This action relates to tbe property rights of the respective parties in a piece of land 30 feet wide arid 120 feet long, ont of what, prior to vacation, was Miller avenue in the Mount Union College Addition to the city of Alliance.

[505]*505The plaintiff’s claim is based upon its rights under a land contract and deed from defendants. The defendants’ claim rests upon their rights as abutting owners when Miller avenue was vacated, which rights they claim to still own and never to have aliened.

The plaintiff, claiming to own said piece, seeks to enjoin defendants from excavating and erecting structures on said premises, and asks to have its title quieted therein.

The defendants deny the right of plaintiff in said land, averring that they are in possession of the premises, and ask to have their title quieted.

The facts undisputed are:

1. That William Nixon owned about 175 acres in Sec. 35, • Twp. 19, Rg. 6, Stark County, Ohio, adjacent to Mount Union College grounds.

2. Mount Union College owned for many years the tract known as Mount Union Campus, originally acquiring .title from William Nixon, to the tract north thereof, including the property in controversy about 1875.

3. On May 18, 1869, William Nixon conveyed a piece 60 x 120 lying in about the center of his land, lying just northeast of the college tract, to E. J. Leeper, the 60 x 120 lot afterwards owned by the defendants. Yol. 128, P. 417 Stark Co. Records.

4. In 1889, Mt. Union College campus was laid out (Plat Book 3, page 104) at which time the Leeper tract seems to have been designated on the plat as “Out-Lot 236”, Stark Co. Atlas, 1896, p. 96. (Leeper tract.)

5. In 1902, Edith and W. J. Leeper sold to Theodore Mistelski.

6. In 1907, Theodore and Elizabeth Mistelski mortgaged to Walter Miller, which mortgage was, in 1912, assigned to Yiola Miller. (Yol. 448, p. 449, Mortgage Records, Stark Co.)

7. In 1909, Theodore Mistelski conveyed the premises to his wife, Elizabeth Mistelski. (Vol. 501, p. 139.)

8. In 1910, the city of Alliance vacated Miller avenue from College street to Simpson street.

9. In 1912, land contract was executed between the parties for the sale and conveyance of the 120 x 60 feet along Miller [506]*506avenue. The description of the property in the land contract is as follows: '

“Situated in the city of Alliance, county of Stark and state of Ohio, and known as Lot sixty (60) feet front on College street and extending north along Miller avenue one hundred and twenty (120) feet, and further described as follows: Beginning at the corner of Miller avenue and College street; then extending north along the east side of Miller street one hundred and twenty feet (120) feet; thence east and parallel with College street sixty (60) feet; thence south and parallel with Miller street one hundred and twenty (120) feet to College street; thence west along the north side of College street sixty (60) feet to the place of beginning, together with all the privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging. ’’

10. In 1913, April 12th, Elizabeth and Theodore Mistelski executed deed to Mount Union College.

11. In 1913, April 12, Letter from David Fording to Mistelski demanding sufficient deed or return of money.

12. July 30, 1915, petition for injunction in this action filed when it appeared defendants had entered upon the premises in question and were about to erect structures thereon, and cross-petition by defendants asserting ownership, and asking quieting of their title.

A solution of the problem here presented requires a determination of what species of property Elizabeth Mistelski acquired upon the vacation of Miller avenue.

The general rule with reference to the rights of abutters on vacated streets is well stated in McQuillan’s Municipal Corporations, page 3008:

“The effect of the vacation is to extinguish the public easement and to relieve the municipality from any duty to keep the street or alley vacated in repair. Sometimes a street is vacated for a quasi-public purpose and the purpose is stated in the vacating ordinance. In such a ease, the title may be vested in the person or company for whose benefit, in conjunction with the public benefit, the street is vacated, although he is not an abutting owner. Ordinarily, however, the street or a part thereof, is vacated solely for a strictly public purpose and in such a case [507]*507the question presents itself — in the absence of legal regulation— whether the title to the street, on such vacation, becomes vested (1) in the municipality, or (2) m the abutting owner, or (3) in the original dedicator of the street.
Except where there is a statute to the contrary, which expressly provides in whom the title shall vest, the general rule is that upon the vacation, discontinuance or abandonment of a street or alley the absolute title to the land covered thereby reverts to the owner of the fee. If the abutting owner is the owner of the fee, the reversion is to him and he takes title to the center of the street unaffected by any interest of the public, if the fee to the street or alley remained in the original proprietor or a remote grantor, the title generally reverts to him and not to the abutting owner.
On the other hand, if the title of the fee of the street is in the municipality, the decisions are not uniform as to who obtains the fee on vacation, the matter being complicated by statutes in some jurisdictions. In some states, the fee remains in the municipality. In other states, by statute or otherwise, the fee reverts either to the original owner of the fee, or to the abutting owner, if the state is the owner of the fee, then it generally becomes the owner of the street on its vacation.
Oftentimes, this title of the abutting owner free from the rights of the public which existed before the vacation of the street, is held to be in the nature of an accretion to the adjacent real estate without reference to the ownership of the fee of the street.
Of course, if the deed to the abutting owner either expressly reserves to the grantor the title to the street, or the circumstances justify the inference of intention not to convey a fee to any part of the street, the grantor remains the owner of the street, and in its vacation the title is in him as against the abutting owner. In all such eases the intention of the grantor governs, but inasmuch as a deed is most strongly construed against .the grantor it will ordinarily be presumed, in the absence of express words to the contrary, that the grantor intended to convey his entire title to the frontage in the street. However, if the street is vacated while the original proprietor and platter owns the ]ots, and thereafter he conveys1 a lot by metes and bounds, and subsequently conveys to another person what was originally the street in front of such lot, the latter grantee obtains a good title thereto.
If a plat of a street is vacated by the original proprietor before the dedication is accepted by the city and before any of the abutting lots are sold, then, of course, a proportionate part of the street does not become a part of each abutting lot. ’ ’

[508]

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mount-union-college-v-mistelski-ohctcomplstark-1917.