Schneider v. Jacob

5 S.W. 350, 86 Ky. 101, 1887 Ky. LEXIS 102
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 22, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 5 S.W. 350 (Schneider v. Jacob) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schneider v. Jacob, 5 S.W. 350, 86 Ky. 101, 1887 Ky. LEXIS 102 (Ky. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

JUDGE BENNETT

delivered the opinion of the court.

Prior to 1837, John I. Jacob and Garnett Duncan, preparatory to selling a piece of land which they owned adjoining the city of Louisville, laid the same off into lots, streets and alleys. They also prepared and recorded in the county court clerk’s office a map or plat, which designated the said lots, streets and alleys. On the plat this piece of ground was called “Jacob’s and Duncan’s Western Addition.”

In this “addition,” Main street was laid off, which was designated on the map as running east and west, and Twenty-fourth, Twenty-fifth, and Twenty-sixth streets were laid off and designated on the map as intersecting Main street, and running north and south, On the twenty-eighth of October, 1837, Jacob and Duncan sold by deed, duly acknowledged and recorded, to Jacob Marcell, a lot of ground which the deed describes as lying on the east side of Twenty-sixth street, and bounded by Main and Twenty-sixth streets and an alley.

On the fourteenth of October, 1837, Jacob and Duncan sold, by deed duly acknowledged and recorded, [103]*103another lot of ground, which was included in their plat, to Jacob Marcell. This lot of ground is described in the deed as lying on the east side of Twenty-sixth street, and bounded by Main and Twenty-sixth streets and an alley, etc. There was no reservation in either deed of Twenty-sixth street or the alley.

A portion of ' the . appellants own these lots by a Tegular derivation of title from the original vendee, Marcell; and the boundaries of the lots in each conveyance are the same as those given in the deeds from Jacob and Duncan to Marcell.

In 1836, Jacob and Duncan sold by deed, which was ■duly acknowledged and recorded, a parcel of ground abutting on Twenty-sixth street, and lying south of ■that sold to Marcell. In this deed, Jacob and Dun-nan reserved Twenty-sixth street. The vendee failing to pay for this parcel of ground, Jacob purchased it at commissioner’s sale for the satisfaction of the pur■chase money, and this property having been allotted to some of Jacob’s devisees in a division of his property, said devisees sold the same to P. and John Bogens, a portion of the appellants. In their deeds of conveyance, the property is described as being bounded "by Twenty-sixth street, etc. But Twenty-sixth street is not reserved in either of said deeds.

Many years after said conveyances by Jacob and Duncan, the city of Louisville, said “addition” having become a part of the city, opened a street, which was designated as Twenty-sixth street, west of the . strip of ground designated on the Jacob and Duncan map as Twenty-sixth street. The strip of ground which was designated on the Jacob and Duncan plat as Twen[104]*104ty-sixth. street was never opened and used as a public-street.

The appellees instituted suit in the court below against the appellants for the purpose of recovering-the strip of ground designated on the Jacob and Duncan plat as Twenty-sixth street. The appellants contested the appellees’ right to the strip, upon the ground that, by virtue of the conveyances above mentioned, they owned to the center of said street. The lower court decided in favor of the appellees. The appellants have appealed to this court.

The appellants resist the appellees’ claim to the strip-of ground in controversy upon the ground that by the-act of dividing said parcel of ground into lots, streets and alleys, adjoining the city of Louisville, Avith a view of making the same a part of the city of Louisville, and then selling the lots to purchasers, referring in the deeds made to them to the streets and alleys thus laid off, and making them the boundary of the lots thus sold and conveyed, Jacob and Duncan dedicated the streets and alleys to the use of the purchasers and the public.

It is well settled that .where the owner of land lays out and establishes a town, Avith various plots of spare-ground, such as streets and alleys, and sells lots Avith clear reference to that plan, he thereby conclusively dedicates such streets and alleys to the use of the purchasers and the public. The owner, by his plat of the-town, which defines the streets and alleys, and by his deeds of conveyance to the purchasers, which call for these streets and alleys as boundaries to the lots sold, covenants with the purchaser that the streets and alleys are dedicated to their use and that of the public. [105]*105(Rowan v. Town of Portland, 8 B. M., 282, 237; Wickliffe v. City of Lexington, 11 B. Mon., 163.)

And the principle is also well-settled that where the owner of land lays the same ont into building lots, streets and alleys, and exhibits a map of it, which defines the lots, streets and alleys, though the streets and alleys are not yet actually opened, and sells the lots as bounded by such street or alley, this is an immediate dedication of such street or alley to the use of the purchaser and to the public. See notes to Dovaston v. Payne, Smith’s Leading Cases, volume 2, part 1, 8th edition, page 160, and cases there cited.

These principles apply primarily in the interest of purchasers of lots who invest their money upon the faith of the assurances of the seller that the streets and alleys which are defined in the plat or map, and which' aré called for in the deeds of conveyance, are dedicated to the use of the purchasers and to the public. The purchasers invest their money with the assurance that they shall have all of the advantages arising from the streets and alleys as defined and delineated in the plat or plan of the newly created town. And that these streets and alleys, as soon as lots are purchased, with clear reference to them, become irrevocably dedicated not only to the personal convenience and necessities of the purchasers, but to the use of the public. And although these streets and alleys may not be actually opened by the authority of the city or town ; although they may be repudiated as public thoroughfares by the city, as in this case, and different streets and alleys opened up in their stead; yet the purchasers of the lots, with clear reference to the streets and alleys as defined in the map [106]*106or plan, are entitled, as between them and the seller, to the benefits of the dedication. The seller, for a valuable consideration, so covenanted with the purchasers; and by that covenant the seller is irrevocably bound; and no subsequent action of the town or city which frustrates the plan of dedication can relieve the seller of his covenant to the purchasers. Therefore, the fact that the city of Louisville, many years after the sale of said lots and the dedication of said street, located Twenty-sixth street at a different place from that indicated by the Jacob and Duncan map, whereby the same was never brought into use as a public street, can furnish no legal grounds for disregarding Jacob's and Duncan’s covenant with the purchasers of the lots.

Having seen that the strip of ground in controversy was dedicated by Jacob and Duncan to the use of the purchasers of the lots and the public, and that, so far as the public is concerned, said strip of ground has been abandoned as a thoroughfare, it remains to be determined whether the appellants are entitled to any of the strip. They claim one-half of it.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.W. 350, 86 Ky. 101, 1887 Ky. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-jacob-kyctapp-1887.