Porter v. City of Stuttgart

204 S.W. 607, 135 Ark. 48, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 390
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 24, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 204 S.W. 607 (Porter v. City of Stuttgart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porter v. City of Stuttgart, 204 S.W. 607, 135 Ark. 48, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 390 (Ark. 1918).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

This suit involves a controversy over the title to a strip of land which the appellant Porter claims by purchase and the city claims as an alley. Porter, who was the plaintiff below, claims title by virtue of a chain of conveyances beginning with one by the admitted owner and coming down to himself, in which the land conveyed is described by metes and bounds and included the strip in controversy. The city claims title to it as an alley under a plat which was filed in the office of the recorder of Arkansas County on February 28, 1887. The plat bears' a certificate of the county surveyor that it “is á true copy of lots laid off on Harper’s land. ’ ’ Unless the fact that he made the certificate implies that he filed the plat, there is nothing on its face to indicate who did file it.

The complaint alleges that Porter is the owner of the tract, and that he acquired title by a conveyance from C. M. Johnson and wife, and that Johnson had acquired title by a conveyance from Henry Flood, dated June 26, 1902, Flood having acquired title by mesne conveyance from the Government. That Porter had had adverse possession for more than seven years, and that in addition to his paper title he had acquired title by virtue of his possession. That the city claimed a strip through it as one of its alleys and had authorized its marshal and street commissioner, who were made defendants, to open it as an alley for public use. That plaintiff Porter was then in possession and had been using it for more than seven years as a lumber yard and had a shed extending over a part of it, and that it was, and during all that time had been, a part of his lumber yard. That the officers of the city were about to remove his lumber and open the alley for public use and travel. That the alley had not been dedicated or conveyed to the city by the owner thereof- or used by the public as an alley or thoroughfare. There was a prayer for a restraining order enjoining the defendants from entering upon the land or interfering with the plaintiff’s use of it, and that his title be quieted against the city.

The answer denied that Porter was the owner of the land or that he had been in the actual, continuous and adverse possession thereof for more than seven years. It admits that it claimed the land in question as an alley and had directed its officers to open it to the public use as such.

An agreed statement of facts was filed which contained the following recitals: That the incorporated town of Stuttgart was made a city of the second class on December 23, 1897, and that it continued as a city of the second class until February 22, 1917, when it became a cdty of the first class.

' That an exhibit attached thereto was a true copy of the original plat of blocks 1, 2 and 7 of I. N. Harper’s Addition to the City of Stuttgart, embracing and including blocks 1, 2 and 7 in said Harper’s Addition, and showing the dedication of the streets and alleys, the blocks and lots numbered thereon, and that the alley in said block 1, which is the subject of this suit, is shown thereon.

The said plat with the - streets and alleys shown thereon and so subdivided, showed the strip of land in litigation to be a part of one of the alleys and was filed December 27, 1886, and has been at all times since recognized as the subdivision into blocks, lots, streets and alleys of the incorporated town of Stuttgart, and subequently the City of Stuttgart as a city of the second class, and now the City of Stuttgart as a city of the first class.

That the officers of the incorporated town of Stuttgart, and afterwards the City of Stuttgart, have at all times dealt with and recognized said plat and subdivision, showing the blocks, lots, streets and alleys therein described as the blocks, lots, streets and alleys in said incorporated town and city, and that all persons owning lots in blocks 1, 2 and 7 and other blocks in I. N. Harper’s Addition, as shown by said plat, have separately assessed the lots therein shown for taxation, executed and accepted conveyances by deeds and otherwise to the respective lots numbered and described and shown by said plat, and that J. I. Porter has executed deeds and purchased lots in .said block 1 and other blocks in said I. N. Harper’s Addition as shown by said. plat.

It was further, stipulated and agreed that the town of Stuttgart, prior to 1897, was comparatively a small place in point of population.; that it .has'grown from 1897 to this dateruntil it is a city of the first,class having a population of five thousand people.

It was also agreed that neither Harper nor any one else had filed any dedication deed.

There'was offered in evidence the'petition to incorporate the town of Stuttgart, from which it appears that one Henry Flood was a signer of the petition and that three days after the order of incorporation he acquired title to the area in controversy, it being included in the conveyance to him of a five acre tract of land. The judgment of the county court incorporating the town was entered of record August 5,1889.

The prayer of the complaint was that the officers of the city be restrained from interfering with the land in question. But the court below refused the relief prayed. It found that the petition by Flood and others to the county court and its orders thereon ’ was an express dedication of all the streets and alleys through any and all of the lands mentioned in the petition which Flood and others had at that time or afterwards acquired, and held as a matter of law that Porter, by recognizing said plat and making .and accepting conveyances according to it, is estopped from objecting to it or to any claim on behalf of the city to it, and declared the law to be that if an owner of land, who plats and sells it according to the plat, dedicates the streets and alleys, that a Subsequent owner, who sells according to the plat, thereby adopts such dedication as his own.

[We do not find it necessary to approve the law thus broadly stated by the court to approve the decree of the court below refusing to enjoin the officers of the city from opening up. the alley. Porter did not appropriate the land to his exclusive, use until after Stuttgart became a city of the second class. He took possession of a portion of the alley in 1908, but there was testimony that even thereafter the public continued such use as it desired to make of the alley until 1910, when it was enclosed. Porter obtained his deed July 17, 1907, which was about ten years after Stuttgart became a city of the second class and eighteen years after it was first incorporated and twenty-one years after the filing of the plat. During all this time Stuttgart was growing rapidly and all of the numerous conveyances of town lots were made with reference to the plat above referred to. A number of such conveyances were to and from Porter himself. It was shown that -the city did not improve the alley, but it was not shown that any improvement was necessary to adapt it to the public use as an alley.

(1) It is apparent that Porter did not acquire title by adverse possession, for it was provided by statute, during the period of his occupancy, that title could- not be thus acquired against cities of the first or second class. Kirby’s Digest, sec. 5593, subdivision 3.

(2) The court below assumed the facts to be, in the absence of proof to the contrary, that the plat in question had been filed by the owner.

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Bluebook (online)
204 S.W. 607, 135 Ark. 48, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-city-of-stuttgart-ark-1918.