Scantlin v. Garvin

46 Ind. 262
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 46 Ind. 262 (Scantlin v. Garvin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scantlin v. Garvin, 46 Ind. 262 (Ind. 1874).

Opinion

Downey, J.

This was an action by the appellants against the appellees, to recover certain real estate, being a part of what was the original public square as laid off in Evansville. The action was commenced in the Vanderburgh Circuit Court, but by change of venue was tried in the Posey Circuit Court. The defendants filed an answer consisting of a single special paragraph, in which they set forth their title at length. The plaintiffs replied to the answer specially. The defendants demurred to the reply. The demurrer was sustained by the court, and the plaintiffs declining to make any further reply, judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants. The appellants assign this ruling as error. They also assign as error the rendition of the judgment for the defendants, but this assignment amounts to nothing, as the rendition of judgment for the defendants must have been right, if the ruling on the demurrer to the reply was correct.

The complaint is in the ordinary form of complaints for the recovery of real property. It may be well to state in brief before setting out the facts in the answer, that the premises in controversy constitute a portion of one of four lots or squares of ground in the city of Evansville, and these four squares of ground were together designated on the original plat of Evansville as “the public square,” although they were separated from each other by streets. .Both parties claim title through and under James W. J ones and Robert M, Evans, two of the three proprietors of Evansville, by whom the town was laid out. The defendants claim title to the premises, under a conveyance from said Jones and Evans, and their wives, to the county agent of Vanderburgh county, and through a deed made by said agent, by direction of the board of commissioners of said county, to the appellees’ grantor. The plaintiffs, as-the heirs at law of the said James W. Jones and Robert M. Evans, .claim the premises by descent. As the sole basis of their claim, the [264]*264appellants insist that the four lots or squares of ground, •designated on the plat of Evansville as the public square, were held by the county of Vanderburgh, upon and subject to a condition subsequent, which condition requked said premises to be perpetually used for public or county purposes, and prevented the alienation thereof; that the sale and conveyance of a.part of said public square, including the premises in controversy, by the county agent, by the direction of the board of commissioners, was a. breach of said condition subsequent, which worked a forfeiture of the property, and gave the heirs of Jones and Evans a right to recover the premises by action against those who hold under the county agent’s deed.

The allegations of the answer are as follows:

1. That the premises sought to be recovered consist of a part of the “public square” in the town of Evansville, in the county of Vanderburgh, and State of Indiana, as said square was laid off and designated on the original plan of the said town of Evansville, according to the plat of the original plan of said town as made, platted, and recorded by James W. Jones, Robert M. Evans, and Hugh McGary, in the year A. D. 1817.

2. That the said original plan of the said town of Evansville was laid off and is situated on fractional section No. 30, in township 6, south of range 10 west, in said county ■of Vanderburgh, and that Hugh McGary, one of the proprietors of said town, was, prior to and on the 20th day of November, A. D. 1817, the owner in fee simple of said entire, section.

3. That prior to said 20th day of June, 1817, the said Hugh McGary had bargained and sold, and agreed to convey to the said James W. Jones and Robert M. Evans one hundred and thirty acres, part and parcel of said fractional section, and in anticipation of said conveyance, the said Jones, Evans, and McGary laid off the original plan of the town of Evansville on said fractional section, by which Main street of said town commenced at the Ohio River and extended back through [265]*265the plat in a north-eastern direction, so as to separate the public square as laid down and designated in said plat by placing two blocks or quarters thereof below (or down the river) from Main street, and by which plat Third street of said town was made to pass through said plan at right angles to Main street, so as to leave one quarter or block of the upper half and one quarter or block of the lower half of said public square on each side of said Third street.

4. That after the said Jones, Evans, and McGary had made and signed said plat, but before the same was proved according to requirements of the statute so as to entitle it to be recorded, the said Hugh McGary and his wife, on the 20th day of June 1817, by their deed of that date conveyed to the said James W. Jones and Robert M. Evans the said ■one-hundred-and-thirty-acre tract before bargained and sold .as aforesaid, the same being all that part of said fractional .section, which was and is situated above or up the river from Main street according to the said plan and plat of said town, ■except thirty acres theretofore conveyed by said McGary to ■Carter Beaman, and that the premises so conveyed by said ■deed embraced and included the two blocks or quarters of said public square which were and are situated above Main street according to the said plat and plan of said town, and also embraced and included the real estate mentioned and ■described in the plaintiffs’ complaint.

5. That after the making and delivery of said deed, on the 17th day of July, A. D. 1817, the said Jones, Evans, and McGary caused the previous execution of said plat to be proved before Louis Tackett, a justice of the peace of War-rick county, in the State of Indiana, said town of Evansville ■and said fractional section then being in said Warrick •county, which proof was endorsed on said plat.

6. That within ten days from and after the said 17th day of July, 1817, the said plat was recorded in the recorder’s office of Warrick county aforesaid, where it still remains of record.

On this plat the square is shown. Main street, sev[266]*266enty-six feet wide, running north and south, cuts the square into two parts, and Third street, sixty feet wide, running, east and west, cuts each half into two parts. So that the square is really divided into four smaller squares. There were no words written upon the part of the plat representing the square to indicate that it was designed for any particular use. But in a writing at the foot of the plat this language is used: “The block through which Main street and Third street pass is reserved for a public square.”

7. That afterward, on the 19th day of January, A. D„. 1819, the said James W. Jones and his wife and the said Robert M.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Ind. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scantlin-v-garvin-ind-1874.