Mullan v. Hochman

145 A. 554, 157 Md. 213, 1929 Md. LEXIS 85
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 3, 1929
Docket[No. 54, January Term, 1929.]
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 145 A. 554 (Mullan v. Hochman) 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
Mullan v. Hochman, 145 A. 554, 157 Md. 213, 1929 Md. LEXIS 85 (Md. 1929).

Opinion

Digges, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The question presented by this record is whether or not that portion of a street in Baltimore City variously designated as Ellicótt Street, Poole’s Lane, and Thirty-seventh Street, which lies between Cairnes Lane and Falls Turnpike Boad, has been dedicated to the full width of sixty feet, so as to require the opening of said street to the full width of sixty feet, thereby necessitating the removal of buildings *215 located on the northern thirty feet thereof, which northern 30-foot portion has been built upon, enclosed and occupied by the appellee and his predecessors in title for forty-five or fifty years prior to the institution of these proceedings. This street, which we will hereafter call Ellicott Street, runs approximately east and west. The land on the south side of this street, extending from Falls Turnpike Road (hereafter called Falls Road) to Cairnes Lane, is the property of Charles E. Litzinger and wife and was acquired by mesne conveyances from Henry Mankin, who in 1855 conveyed all of his property to trustees for the benefit of his creditors. The various deeds by which Litzinger acquired title describe his property as binding on Ellicott Street, and show that it binds on the west side of FalLs Road, the east side of Cairnes Lane, and south side of Ellicott Street. On the north side of Ellicott Street, between Falls Road and Cairnes Lane, it appears that there is a lot fifty feet wide, wdiich did not belong to Henry Mankin at the time he conveyed his property to the trustees. In 1857 the trustees conveyed to the widow and children of Nathaniel Parsons a lot fronting on Falls Road, but not bordering on Ellicott Street, the beginning point in this description being, “in |.he center of the Falls Turnpike Road, as laid out sixty feet wide, fifty feet northerly from a line drawn north 79 degrees east along the north side of Ellicott Street and also sixty feet wide.” About nine years later, in 1866, Isaac Orowther, Sr., administrator d. b. n. c. t. a,, of Nathaniel Parsons, deceased, conveyed to Beunain Forsyth a lot of land described in part as follows: “Beginning for the same at a point in the center of the Falls Turnpike Road as laid out sixty feet wide, being the northeast corner of the whole lot of ground of which the piece now being described forms a part and it also being the beginning of the said whole lot, piece or parcel of ground and running thence along the center of an avenue or street sixty feet wide; to be lain out when required in a legal manner by the property owners, along the route of such proposed street or avenue.” The description in the deed dated June 23, 1919, by which the *216 appellee acquired title, is: “Beginning for the same at a point in the center of the Falls Turnpike Road as laid out 60 feet wide and the intersection of the center of an avenue or street 60 feet wide to be laid out when required in a legal manner by the property owners along the route of such proposed street or avenue; and running thence westerly and binding on the center of said avenue, 190 feet to the center ■of an alley to be laid out 20 feet wide, thence binding along the center of said alley parallel to the Falls Turnpike Road 90 feet; thence easterly, 190 feet parallel to the center of said avenue to be laid out as aforesaid to the center of the Falls Turnpike Road; and thence binding on the center of the Falls Turnpike Road to the place of beginning.” The last description is contained in the three dfeeds which intervened between the deed from Crowther, administrator, and the deed to the appellee.

It will be noted that the appellee obtained by his deed, of the land conveyed by Crowther, administrator, to Forsyth, only a 10-foot strip on the north side of his lot running, from Falls Road to Oairnes' Lane. Therefore it appears that at the present time the appellee owns a lot fronting 90 feet on the center of Falls Road, and of that width running to the center of Cairnes Lane. This 90-foot frontage is made up, first, of 30 feet of what is claimed to be Ellicott Street; second, 50 feet being the lot which was disposed of before the deed from Mankin to the trustees; and 10 feet of the land embraced in the deed from the trustees to Parsons. There is no record title of this 50-foot lot prior to the deed from Crowther, administrator, to Forsyth; and all that this record discloses in reference thereto is that it was not owned by Mankin at the time of his conveyance to the trustees. However, it having been conveyed to Forsyth by the administrator d. b. n. c. i. a,, of Nathaniel Parsons, there is a reasonable presumption that Nathaniel Parsons was the owner théreof at the time of his death, and became so before Man-kin conveyed his property to the trustees. At the time of the conveyance from Mankin to the trustees this property was located in Baltimore County, and upon an examination of *217 the records there it was found that there had been filed for record in 1909 a lithograph plat showing a subdivision of Henry Mankin’s property, upon which there are delineated certain streets and alleys, among which is Ellicott Street, 60 feet. This plat on its face is designated as “Plat No. I” and states: “Map of Hampden property belonging to Henry Mankin. The lots are measured to the middle of the streets. Scale 200' in an inch. 1856. Wm. Dawson, surveyor. Lith. by A. Holm & Co., Balto.” There is nothing in the record to show by whom or why this plat was recorded in 1909, but because of its appearance and date, and upon the suggestion of the clerk that it must have been filed in an old equity proceeding, counsel for the appellant examined the equity records and found an equity case instituted about 1856, entitled Esbach v. Talbot and Taggart, trustees. Upon an examination of these proceedings it was found that the trustees’ reports showed that lots had been sold with reference to “Henry Mankin’s Plat No. 1.” These lots were designated by numbers but not described by metes and bounds, and upon a comparison with the plat the numbers indicating the lots sold were found to correspond with similar numbers on the plat. All of the conveyances made by the trustees which are embraced in the record, with the exception of Litsiuger’s, described the property conveyed as running to the center of the streets, and the plat states, “the lots are measured to the middle of the streets.” The Mankin plat shows several streets running east and west through the subdivision and ending in Falls Hoad on the east.

The record discloses that the Poole family, from whom the appellant acquired his title, at one time owned about twenty-eight acres of contiguous land, the title to which came down from Mankin, and which was occupied by them as a country estate, the streets and alleys as shown on the Mankin plat never having been laid out or opened on the ground. This Poole property was located west of Cairnes Lane and embraced the entire bed of Ellicott Street as shown on the plat lying west of Cairnes Lane. For more than 45 years there had been a street or roadway over the south 30 feet *218 of Ellicott Street between Ealls Eoad and Gairnes Lane, but, as stated, the north 30 feet of said street between those points for the same length of time had been enclosed, occupied, and built upon by the appellee and his predecessors in title.

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Bluebook (online)
145 A. 554, 157 Md. 213, 1929 Md. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mullan-v-hochman-md-1929.