Oliver Schlemmer Co. v. Steinman & Meyer Furniture Co.

2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 293
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedJuly 15, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 293 (Oliver Schlemmer Co. v. Steinman & Meyer Furniture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oliver Schlemmer Co. v. Steinman & Meyer Furniture Co., 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 293 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Plaintiff’s property was leased in two parts. The first part was an abandoned bowling alley, and was remodeled between March and May of 1904, with a window placed in the rear wall, and without any other exit upon said alley. Shortly thereafter plaintiffs began the erection of a building on the other part of their tract. During the erection of this building defendant filed a petition with the city council to vacate said alley. While said petition was so pending plaintiff placed in the rear wall of the new building a door and two windows facing towards that alley, and this was the first attempted use of the alley by the plaintiff as a means of access to said alley from plaintiff’s manufacturing site. Without notice to the plaintiff, but with actual knowledge, and without appearance or consent or protest on the part of the plaintiff, the defendant company had its petition for vacating the alley allowed and signed by the city May 16, 1904. The proceedings are admitted to be regular and formal. On July 5, 1904, the defendant company purchased from the heirs of the original dedicators and grantors to the city the title to the strip of ground covered by that part of the alley which was located between the plaintiff’s and defendant’s premises, and the defendant company has begun the erection of a wall across the alley, against the rear of plaintiff’s building, and proposes to utilize for its own purposes the entire part of the alley upon which plaintiff’s build[295]*295ing abuts, and is blockading the west end of the alley, claiming title, to the exclusion of any right or easement thereto’ on the part of the plaintiff. Such wall was .completed after plaintiff had given to' defendant notice that it would apply for an injunction and temporary restraining order against the erection of said wall, and before the petition was actually filed.

The defendant company, through its counsel, contends that the plaintiff company is estopped from claiming any rights, because it had notice of the proceedings in council to vacate the alley; that it should have brought its suit in injunction while such proceedings were pending, forcing the defendant to apply to a court for vacation, and in which proceeding its full damage, if any it had, could have been assessed; that plaintiff waived payment for loss of any easement it might have had in failing to prevent the vacation by council; that it is in any event only damaged in money, and that it has no right to an injunction, because of the sufficiency of the outlet in the front pf plaintiff’s property, and that it is not seriously inconvenienced by the closing of the alley. Defendant further claims that the plaintiff is guilty of laches in allowing its easement to be lost, and in standing by and permitting defendant to expend money in publishing the notice of the pendency and prayer of the petition to vacate and in the purchase of the strip of ground; and also should be estopped because of its silence when it should have spoken. Defendant also claims that it has leases on the two sides on the west end of the vacated alley, which gives it a perfect- right to close the alley at that point; and that, inasmuch as the east end is a cul-de-sac, if closed at the west end it would make the intervening space a place of nuisance, which could neither be drained nor cleaned.

Plaintiff’s counsel argued that the proceedings before council were not conclusive upon abutting owners who are not compensated, as the law gives no right of appeal and particularly reserves the rights of those who do. not consent; that the plaintiff was not compelled to appear before council, and that it had the right to rely upon the preservation of its interests so being preserved; that the plaintiff is not injured by the act of vacating the alley and does not complain regarding it. Plaintiff objects to the defendant’s acts in interfering with plaintiff’s [296]*296rights to the use of the alley; that the plaintiff could not enjoin council from doing what it had a perfect right to do, and that defendant selected this more arbitrary course instead of the one in the court of common pleas, in which plaintiff could have received damages. Plaintiff also insists that it was guilty of no laches, because it had warned the defendant before the wall was erected that an injunction would be applied for,-and that defendant notwithstanding such warning proceeded to erect said wall'and to blockade the alley on the west end. Plaintiff’s counsel also insists that having the right to access over said alley, and it being vacated without plaintiff’s consent, no subsequent purchase by the defendant could restrict plaintiff’s established easement. It is argued that, inasmuch as the original dedicators conveyed the alley by deed to the municipality, its successors and assigns forever, this proposed vacation, if it divested anything, it divested its use as an alley, and that such original dedicators could not transfer the title to the defendant because it remained in the municipality.

“No particular words or form of conveyance is necessary to render the act of dedicating land to public uses effectual. Anything- which fully demonstrates the intention of the donor or the acceptance by the public works the effect.” LeClercq v. Gallipolis, 7 Ohio, pt. 1, p. 218.

It would not, in my judgment, be necessary for the dedication or deed to express the object of the use to be public as contra-distinguished from that of private usage. There would be no need of dedicating a private alley. The city could not accept it under such terms, for it could not improve private property. The dedication on the plat as “Kirby alley,” and the acceptance of Kirby alley by the city, as well as the expression in the deed that the strip was to be used as an alley and should be known as “Kirby alley” clearly indicates that it was to be used for the benefit of the public. See Elliott on Roads, Section 24.

Inasmuch as a municipality has the right in its governmental capacity to lay out streets, alleys and sewers, it could have condemned this strip and paid to the Kirby estate its value, and it would then have.become a public highway irrespective of the [297]*297wishes of the adjoining; owners. If, therefore, the condemned way abutted on plaintiff’s property its property could have been assessed for any improvement made by the municipality upon such public way. Its protest because of a failure- or refusal to use it would have availed nothing. If, on the other hand, the Kirby estate saw fit to dedicate this alley to public uses, and was compelled by the city to make the alley abut on plaintiff’s premises, no other result would follow. Stevens v. Shannon, 6 C. C., 142.

An abutter is one whose property abuts, or is contiguous or adjoins at a border or boundary, as where no other land, road or street intervenes (Bouvier’s Law Dictionary). So it follows as a natural sequence that if an abutter can be assessed for abutting improvements he is entitled to special and peculiar rights in such adjoining alley not common to the people at large, which amounts in law to an easement or right of access (Lewis on Eminent Domain, Section 91e, f); Jones on Easement, Section 548; Branahan v. Hotel Co., 39 O. S., 333); and as has been cited by counsel, in Bingham v. Doane, 9 Ohio, 165, while his remedy under common law pleadings might be different, his right to the use of a public street exists although his title extends only to the edge of the street and not to its center.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-schlemmer-co-v-steinman-meyer-furniture-co-ohctcomplhamilt-1904.