Seat v. Louisville & Jefferson County Land Co.

293 S.W. 986, 219 Ky. 418, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 374
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 8, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 293 S.W. 986 (Seat v. Louisville & Jefferson County Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seat v. Louisville & Jefferson County Land Co., 293 S.W. 986, 219 Ky. 418, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 374 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Logan

— •Affirming.

This suit grows out of the dedication of a street or public way by the appellee, Louisville and Jefferson •County Land Company, and the appellant, Consolidated Realty Company. The street or public highway dedicated by these, two companies is known as Emerson ave *420 nue and divides the subdivision belonging to the Consolidated Realty Company on the northern side of Emerson avenue known as Strathmoor from a subdivision lying on the southern side of Emerson avenue belonging' to the Louisville and Jefferson Land Company known as Villula Park. The main thoroughfare in the Strathmoor subdivision is Strathmoor boulevard, and the lots in that subdivision when laid out fronted, on Strathmoor boulevard and extended back a distance- of from. 210 to 220 feet to what is now Emerson avenue. The appellee "was much interested in opening Emerson avenue so that the- lots in Villula Parle might front on that avenue and this desire on the part of appellee led it to enter into negotiations with the Consolidated Realty Company looking towards the dedication of Emerson avenue. The appellee was to furnish nearly all of the ground constituting Emerson avenue, but the Consolidated Realty Company was to furnish a small triangle of land about 225 feet in length, with an extreme width of 12 feet, to straighten out the northern frontage of Emerson avenue. The agreement and plat hereinafter referred to provided for the furnishing of the ground for Emerson avenue as above indicated.

On July 8, 1924, the two land companies above mentioned, with all other owners of lots fronting -on Emerson avenue at that time, entered into a dedication of said av-enue- and filed the plat and plan in accordance with the provisions of Ky. Stats., section 2826. The plat and plan were approved by the board of public works of the city of Louisville, by the city engineer, by the county judge and all other proper authorities, and were thereafter on. July 1.8, 1924, recorded in the office of the clerk of the Jefferson county court in a book kept for that purpose. This -dedication was signed and acknowledged by the lot owners fronting on Emerson avenue and was signed by the Louisville and Jefferson County Land Company by its president, Prank Simon, and was signed by the Consolidated Realty Company by its president,- C. C. Hieatt. The dedication was acknowledged by both of these companies.

The plat and plan showed Emerson avenue inclosed by red lines as well as the- general location of the Strathmoor subdivision and the Villula Park subdivision. *421 There was written on this plat above the signature of those signing, the following words, of dedication:

“Louisville, Ky., 1923.
“We, the undersigned property owners, hereby dedicate the above described 50 foot roadway as enclosed in red lines, to be a public thoroughfare, said roadway being an extension of Emerson avenue, in and adjoining Strathmoor subdivision No. 2. We agree that the frontage on said Emerson avenue shall be used for dwelling house sites. Lot owners whose property binds on this road are permitted to erect a dwelling thereon facing this avenue.”

After this dedication the appellee proceeded to improve Emerson avenue thus dedicated at a cost of about $9,000.00. The Consolidated Realty Company contributed about $500.00, in addition to the ground which it surrendered towards the improvement of Emerson avenue.

On the 25th day of April, 1925, the Consolidated Realty Company conveyed two lots- in its subdivision to the appellant, Alta M. Seat. These lots fronted on Strathmoor boulevard and also had a frontage on Emerson avenue; that is, they extended from Strathmoor boulevard to Emerson avenue a distance at that point of between 210 and 220 feet. The deed so executed to the appellant, Seat, contained a provision that all outbuildings on the lots so sold should 'be erected on the rear of the lot and that outbuildings should not be erected until after a residence had been erected or at the same time as the erection of a residence. The appellant, Seat, erected two houses fronting on Strathmoor boulevard located on her two lots and then began the erection of a garage on the frontage of Emerson avenue. The appellee claimed that the erection of the garage on the’ frontage of Emerson avenue was a violation of the restrictions contained in the dedication relating to the frontage of Emerson avenue. The appellee had already erected a house at a cost of about $9,000.00 on the other side of Emerson avenue opposite the location of the garage.

The appellee instituted this suit seeking an injunction to prevent the appellant, Seat, from erecting the garage. A temporary injunction was granted and a motion to dissolve it was made before Judge Dietzman *422 of tliis court, who, after considering the motion in consultation with Judges Thomas, Clay and McCandless, overruled it. The case was then prepared on its merits and the chancellor made the temporary injunction perpetual, and this appeal is a result of that judgment.

The appellee contends in this action that the restrictions in the dedication are valid and that to allow the erection of outhouses and garages on the north front of Emerson avenue would diminish the value of its property very materially and would tend to destroy the sale of the lots in Yillula Park. It is well established by the evidence that this would be the result if outhouses and garages should be erected on the north frontage of Emerson avenue. If the restrictions in the dedication are valid, and if the subsequent purchasers of lots having a north frontage on Emerson avenue are bound by the restrictions, and if the restrictions by their terms prevent the erection of outhouses and garages on the north frontage of Emerson avenue, the matter was one where the chancellor was well within his powers in granting injunctive relief.

The first question which we will consider is whether the plat and plan signed and acknowledged by those owning lots fronting on both sides of Emerson avenue is a recordable instrument, and if recordable whether the dedication written thereon and signed and acknowledged was also recordable. Judge Dietzman, in his opinion overruling motion to dissolve the temporary injunction, which opinion was concurred in by Judges Thomas, Clay and McCandless, said:

‘ ‘ Second. Kentucky Statutes, section 2826, was not repealed by the City Planning Act, chapter 99 of the Acts of 1922. The latter act gave permission to any city of the first class to create a city planning commission by ordinance. When so created, the powers vested in the board of public works by section 2826 to approve plats would then be transferred to the planning commission, but until the planning commission was created the powers still remained in the board of public works. The Statutes, section 2775, require us to take judicial notice of the ordinances of the city of Louisville, and we therefore judicially know that no city planning commission has ever been created by the city of Louis *423 ville.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
293 S.W. 986, 219 Ky. 418, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seat-v-louisville-jefferson-county-land-co-kyctapphigh-1927.