People v. Beaubien

2 Doug. 256
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2 Doug. 256 (People v. Beaubien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Beaubien, 2 Doug. 256 (Mich. 1846).

Opinion

Goodwin, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The questions reserved for the opinion of this court, in the case presented, are,

1. Was the testimony offered by the defendant and received subject to the objection made to it, admissible ?

2. Under the law applicable to the special finding, is the defendant guilty, or not guilty, of the offence charged in the indictment ?

On the part of the prosecution it is insisted, that the alleged highway was dedicated to the public use as a public street or highway, by the record of the plat of 1S36, on which it was laid out and designated as “Street leading to Burying Ground,” and by the subsequent execution, by the defendant, of conveyances to different persons of lots as designated on this plat, and referring to it as duly recorded; and, that the evidence offered by the defendant, was inadmissible to control or destroy the legal operation and effect of these acts.

The “Act to provide for the recording of town plats, and for other purposes,” approved April 12, 1827, (R. L. 1827 p. 278,) was in force when the plat of 1836 was recorded. The first section of this statute provided, that whenever a town should thereafter be laid out, the proprietor should, before selling any lots, cause a true map or plat thereof to be recorded in the registry of the county where the same lay, and imposed a penalty for selling lots before this should have been done. The second section provided that such maps or plats should particularly set forth and describe all the public ground within such town, by its boundaries, courses, and extent; and whether it be intended for streets, alle37s, commons, or other public ■ uses; and all the lots intended for salé, by progressive [270]*270numbers, and their precise length and width; and that these maps made and acknowledged before a justice of the peace, or a justice of the county court of the county, ora judge of the supreme court, and certified under the hand and seal of the judge or justice taking such acknowledgment, should be deemed a sufficient conveyance to vest the fee of such parcels of land as were therein expressed, named, and intended to be for public use, in the county in which such town should lie, to and for the uses and purposes therein named, expressed and intended, and for no other use or purpose whatever.

This statute, as is apparent on its face, was designed to provide an explicit mode for the dedication of streets and other grounds designed for public uses, upon the laying out of towns by individual proprietors, and to render the rights of purchasers, and the public generally, in grounds thus dedicated, definite and certain. It also obviated the difficulty met with in some of the cases in the application of common law principles of dedication, in regard to the ownership of the fee, by providing that, upon compliance with the provisions of the act, this should vest in the county, in trust for the designed uses.

The mode in which the dedication was to be made, and the title to pass, was specifically pointed out. No formal grant was required, and no grantee was designated. A map or plat was required, with the public grounds, streets, &c., particularly set forth and described upon it. This was required to be acknowledged before one of the officers named in tho act, and to be accompanied with a certificate of the acknowledgment, under the hand and seal of the officer. The map, with the acknowledgment, was also required to be recorded. The mode of conveyance required by this statute was peculiar, and different from any other known to the law; and upon obvious and familiar principles, to be operative to pass the title, a con[271]*271veyance under the statute must have fully complied with its several requirements.

In this case the ground laid out and mapped was an addition to the city of Detroit, not included in its limits at the time of the passage of the act.' The map appears to have been recorded in January, 1836. It does not appear to have been acknowledged as required by the act, and is accompanied with no certificate of acknowledgment. The subsequent references to it, in deeds to individual purchasers of lots, and the acknowledgment of those deeds to the grantees named in them, cannot suppty the defect, or operate as an acknowledgment of the map with the certificate signed and sealed, required by the statute.

Those deeds, with their references, maybe very proper evidences as acts in pais to establish a dedication upon general rules of law, independent of the statute. And, though the jury do not fincl that the plat was placed upon record by the defendant, or by his express authority, yet the deeds show the act, by whomsoever done, to have been by him ratified and confirmed.

The next question which arises is, whether, aside from the provision of the statute, the place in question became, by the acts of the defendant, a public street or highway, under the general rules of law; for, though it may not have become so by force of the statute, yet it may have been thus dedicated to the public for that purpose. And the recording of the plat, and the reference to it as duly recorded under the provisions of the statute, are facts entitled to great weight, in determining this point. It is contended by the prosecution that these acts — the causing the survey, the making and recording the map, the selling of lots according to it, as is done in the deeds mentioned in the verdict — operated as a dedication of the land to the public as a street, and that the evidence offered and received was incompetent to show that no dedication was [272]*272designed. On the other hand, not only is the opposite of these propositions contended, but it is insisted, that even if these acts amounted to a dedication, there must have been an acceptance on the part of the public, or its constituted authorities, before any right in the public could attach. To determine the questions presented, an examination becomes necessary, of some of the cases upon the doctrine of dedication, of late much considered, and the principles by which it is governed.

Rex v. Hudson, 2 Strange 909, was a prosecution by information for stopping a common footway. It was proved that the locus in quo had been a common passage as far back as the witnesses could remember. The defendant produced alease of it for the term of fifty-six years, for the purpose of being used as a passage way during the term, which had then recently expired. It was held that the defendant was not guilty, and that the time during which it had been left open after the expiration of the lease, was not long enough to amount to a gift to the public.

Lade v. Shepherd, 2 Strange 1004, was an action of trespass. The place of the supposed trespass was the property of the plaintiff, who had several years before built a street upon it, which had been ever since used as a highway. It was held that there had been a dedication to the public for a right of passage, but not a transfer of the property in the soil.

In Rex v. Lloyd, 1 Camp. 260, which was an indictment for obstructing a highway, the place in question was a narrow and circuitous street or passage in the city of London, which had been open and used by the public as far back as could be remembered. It had been long lighted by the city ; there had been no chain across it, nor any mark to denote that it was private property. The houses upon it had been owned by one individual.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Doug. 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-beaubien-mich-1846.