Paine v. Consumers' Forwarding & Storage Co.

71 F. 626, 19 C.C.A. 99, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2632
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 9, 1895
DocketNo. 256
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 71 F. 626 (Paine v. Consumers' Forwarding & Storage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paine v. Consumers' Forwarding & Storage Co., 71 F. 626, 19 C.C.A. 99, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2632 (6th Cir. 1895).

Opinion

TAFT, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts). Seymour Austin owned the title to the strips here in controversy. Against his devisee and legal representative, the decree of the common pleas court established that Lemuel Storrs had acquired title to the same two strips. If Storrs did not convey the strips here during his lifetime, they descended on his death to his heirs by whose quitclaim deeds they passed to the plaintiff below. It is conceded that Storrs did not convey any part of Water street to any one by specific description. Did his deeds conveying the lots bounding on vacated Water street convey the fee to the center line of that street? If they did, then the charge of the trial judge was correct; if not, the judgment must be reversed. When Water street south of Fourth street was vacated in 1815, the original proprietors had sold none of the lots abutting thereon. The effect of the vacation, therefore, was to vest the fee in Water street in those who owned the abutting lots. It is well settled that where a grantor bounds the lot conveyed on a described street, and is the owner of the land embraced therein, he is estopped to deny the right of the grantee to use the land for street purposes whether it be in fact a street or not. Thomas v. Poole, 7 Gray, 83; Rodgers v. Parker, 9 Gray, 445; Stetson v. Dow, 16 Gray, 373; Emerson v. Wiley, 10 Pick. 310; Cox v. James, 45 N. Y. 562; Dawson v. Railroad Co., 15 Minn. 136 (Gil. 102); 3 Washb. Real Prop. (5th Ed.) *467, *635, *671; Devl. Deeds, § 1027. And the same effect is given to a deed describing the lot conveyed by number and reference to an undedicated plat upon which the lot is shown to front upon a street. In such a case the easement which the grantee acquires is not limited to that part of the described street in front of his lot, but it extends to the whole street shown so far as it was owned by the grantor when the deed was executed. Rodgers v. Parker, 9 Gray, 445; Thomas v. Poole, 7 Gray, 83; Cox v. James, 45 N. Y. 562. It is quite true that it has been held that such a deed does not bind the grantor to open and maintain a street [629]*629in a condition fit for travel (Hennessey v. Railway Co., 101 Mass. 540); nor does it imply a covenant that the street is in such a condition when the deed is made. The only effect is that, as between the grantor and grantee, the latter may do nothing inconsistent with this right. Between them, therefore, it is a street. Nor does it prevent this result that the plat was marked vacated, or that in some of the deeds it was referred to as vacated. The vacation of the" plat affected only the public easement. It did not con; diet with the use of the street as a common way by all the abutting tot owners. Water street was absolutely necessary to any enjoyment of the lots at all. A steep hill cut off a large part of each of the numbered lots from High street, and the water lots had no frontage except on Water street.

By the common-law rule of construction, a deed of land which describes it as bounding upon a street carries the fee of the grantor to the middle line of the street. 3 Washb. Real Prop. (5th Ed.) 635, where all the authorities are collected. The rule is thus comprehensively stated by Mr. Justice Gray in the case of the City of Boston v. Richardson, 13 Allen, 146, 154:

'•Whenever land is described as bounded by other land, or by a building or structure, the name of which, according to its legal or ordinary meaning, includes the title in the land of which it has been made part, as a house, •i mill, a wharf, or the like, the side of the laud or structure referred to a boundary is the limit of the grant; but when the boundary line is simply be an object, whether natural or artificial, the name of which is used in ordinary speech, as defining a boundary, and not as describing a title in fee, and which does not, in its description or nature, include the earth as far down as the grantor owns, and yet which has width, as in the case of a way, a river, a ditch, a wall, a fence, a tree, or a stake and stones, then the center of the thing so running over or standing on the land is the boundary of the lot granted.”

In Banks v. Ogden, 2 Wall. 68, Chief Justice Chase, speaking for the supreme court, said:

“It is a familiar principle of law that a grant of land bordering on a road «v river carries the title to the center of the river or road, unless the terms or circumstances of the grant indicate a limitation of its extent by exterior Hues.”

In Ohio the same general rule is in force. In Lembeck v. Nye, 47 Ohio St. 336, 24 N. E. 686, the question was whether a deed of kind bordering on the side of a nonnavigable lake, the length of which was perceptibly greater than its breadth, carried the interest of the grantor in the bottom of the lake to the middle line of the Lake, and the court answered it in the affirmative. At page 349, 47 Ohio, and page 686, 24 N. E., Judge Bradbury in delivering the principal opinion in the case says:

“And in this state, where the rule is so firmly established that a boundary ju a running stream carries the land to the middle or thread thereof, principles of analogy afford strong grounds l’or applying it to nonnavigable lakes. The reasons for the rule in one case apply equally to the other. The existence of ‘strips or gores’ of land along the margin of nonnavigable lakes, to which the title may be held in abeyance for indefinite periods of timo, is is great an evil as are ‘strips and gores’ of land along highways or running -streams. The litigation that may arise therefrom after long years, or the [630]*630happening of some unexpected event, is equally probable, and alike vexa-: tious in each of the cases, and that public policy which would seek to prév vent this by a construction that would carry the title to the center of a high-;' way, running stream, or nonnavigable lake that may be made a boundary of the lands conveyed applies indifferently, and with equal force, to all of' them. It- would seem, also, that whatever inference might arise from the-presumed intention of the parties against the reservation of the land underlying the water would be as strong in one case as in either of the others.”

.Again, at page 351, 47 Ohio, and page 686, 24 N. E., Jtídge Bradbury says:

“While, if the parties to a deed make a running stream, a nonnavigable lake, or a highway, one boundary of the lands conveyed by it, public policy and the presumed intention of the parties will extend the line to the middle of such monument, yet it is competent for them to limit the conveyance to the side of the highway, the top of the bank of the running stream, or to the edge of the water of the lake.”

• See, also, the case of Stevens v. Shannon, 6 Ohio Cir. Ct. R. 142, approved in Kerr v. Commissioners, 51 Ohio St. 593; Dembitz, Land Tit § 11; notes to Dovaston v. Payne, 2 Smith, Lead. Cas. 178.

But several reasons are pressed upon the court for holding that this general rule has no application to the case at bar.

First it is said that the principle is never applied except when there is an actual public highway forming a visible monument.’ The case of Hopkinson v. McKnight, 31 N. J. Law, 427, is relied upon to sustain this proposition. The weight of authority is, however, decidedly to the contrary. In the case of Stark and Wales v. Coffin, 105 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
71 F. 626, 19 C.C.A. 99, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paine-v-consumers-forwarding-storage-co-ca6-1895.