State ex rel. Alabama State Port Authority v. Mobile River Terminal Co.

898 So. 2d 763, 2004 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 618, 2004 WL 1753418
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedAugust 6, 2004
Docket2030373
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 898 So. 2d 763 (State ex rel. Alabama State Port Authority v. Mobile River Terminal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Alabama State Port Authority v. Mobile River Terminal Co., 898 So. 2d 763, 2004 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 618, 2004 WL 1753418 (Ala. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Judge.

This appeal arose out of a petition to vacate a portion of Virginia Street, which is located within the city limits of Mobile, that was filed by the City of Mobile (“the City”) at the request of the State of Alabama, by and through the Alabama State Port Authority (“the Port Authority”). The portion of Virginia Street at issue generally runs west to east and lies between Water Street and the channel of the Mobile River. The subject right-of-way is 50 feet wide and approximately 2,000 feet long. The Port Authority owns the property abutting the right-of-way to the south. Mobile River Terminal Company, Inc. (“MRT”), owns the property abutting the right-of-way to the north.1

[765]*765The Port Authority and MRT, along with numerous other persons and entities, were named as defendants in the City’s petition to vacate. The Port Authority answered the petition to vacate and joined in the City’s request that the street be vacated. The Port Authority also filed a cross-claim against MRT requesting that the probate court declare, upon vacation, that fee-simple title to the entire right-of-way be vested in the Port Authority. Thereafter, MRT answered the City’s petition as well as the Port Authority’s cross-claim; MRT also filed a cross-claim against the Port Authority, asserting that upon vacation title to the right-of-way should be divided equally between the Port Authority and MRT. After the Port Authority answered MRT’s cross-claim, MRT filed an amended cross-claim asserting, as an alternative theory, that upon vacation MRT would own certain portions of the right-of-way by adverse possession. Thereafter, the Port Authority answered MRT’s amended cross-claim.

On August 28, 2003, the probate court held a hearing in which it received ore tenus evidence; numerous exhibits consisting of, among other things, deeds and other documents rélating to the right-of-way were also admitted into evidence. The Port Authority and MRT were the only defendants that appeared at the hearing; neither of them objected to vacating the right-of-way. The Port Authority contended that upon vacation fee-simple title to the entire right-of-way should be vested in the Port Authority because, it claimed, the right-of-way was situated entirely within the land of the Port Authority’s predecessor in title and MRT’s predecessor in title had contributed no land to the right-of-way. MRT, on the other hand, contended that because MRT is the owner of the land abutting the north side of the right-of-way, upon vacation, MRT and the Port Authority should each receive title to one-half of the underlying fee of the right-of-way.

On December 23, 2003, the probate court entered a judgment granting the City’s petition and declaring that the subject portion of Virginia Street was vacated; 2 the probate court further declared that the underlying fee of right-of-way would be divided at the center line, with MRT owning the northern half of the right-of-way and the Port Authority owning the southern half. In its judgment, the probate court stated, in pertinent part:

“9. The [right-of-way] has been the subject of litigation previously. See City of Mobile v. Chapman, 202 Ala. 194[, 79 So. 566] (1918). The Alabama Supreme Court’s recitation of the facts concerning the matter before it, as well as its ruling, have special significance in the instant cause.
“10. In City of Mobile, Delena Chapman, one of the daughters of John Lawrence Lavretta sued the City of Mobile and others to enjoin the City of Mobile from laying a sanitary sewer line along what was depicted on two (2) maps to be Virginia Street. Chapman contended that Virginia Street, as depicted on said maps, was not a dedicated roadway. The Circuit Court of Mobile County, Chancery Division, granted Delena Chapman the requested relief, but, recognizing the City of Mobile’s right of eminent domain, allowed the municipality 30 days within which to institute con[766]*766demnation. The City of Mobile appealed, and the Alabama Supreme Court reversed the lower court’s decision. A close review of City of Mobile indicates that the appellate decision turned in large part on the reliance to be given to maps and references in maps in real estate conveyance documents. City of Mobile, 202 Ala. at 199-202.
“11. One of the maps that was the subject of review and discussion in City of Mobile was a map prepared in conjunction with an earlier partition suit involving the same property. This map was referred to as the ‘Brewer and Bell Map.’ The Alabama Supreme Court reprinted the Brewer and Bell Map as Exhibit Number 1 in City of Mobile. City of Mobile, 202 Ala. at 195-196.
“12. The earlier partition suit was instituted in the Circuit Court of Mobile County, Chancery Division, on September 20, 1851. A decree for partition and the appointment of commissioners was entered on January 7, 1852. The subsequent report of the commissioners of the partition was made about April 12, 1852, and the several allotments to the owners, of their respective tracts, were confirmed by a decree dated April 16, 1852. City of Mobile, 202 Ala. at 198-199.
“13. In the earlier partition suit, the allotment made by the commissioners to H.O. Brewer and Issac Bell, Jr., together with the decree of confirmation, employed an incomplete description of the locations and dimensions of streets. Without the map referred to and made a part of the partition proceeding and decree therein, the streets that traversed the subject lands could not be located. City of Mobile, 202 Ala. at 199. The map indicated that Virginia Street was open from Conception Street eastwardly to the channel of the Mobile River. City of Mobile, 202 Ala. at 200.
“14. The second map that was the subject of review and discussion in City of Mobile, was prepared by Lewis Troost, who served at some point in time as the city engineer for the City of Mobile. This map was reprinted by the Alabama Supreme Court in City of Mobile, as Exhibit Number 2. City of Mobile, 202 Ala. at 196. Likewise, this map indicated that Virginia Street was open from Conception Street to the Mobile River. City of Mobile, 202 Ala. at 200.
“15. In City of Mobile, the Alabama Supreme Court held that for purposes of: (A) interpreting the conveyance to John Lawrence Lavretta, Delena Chapman’s predecessor in title; and (B) ascertaining the intention of the parties to the deed granting title to John Lawrence Lavretta, as to the existence, locations, dimensions, and extent of the streets, lots, and blocks indicated thereon, the maps referred to in the decree of the Circuit Court of Mobile County, Chancery Division, in the above referenced partition suit and in the deed granting title to John Lawrence Lavret-ta became a part of the title to the lands that were the subject of the litigation in City of Mobile. City of Mobile, 202 Ala. at 200.
“16. The Alabama Supreme Court determined that Virginia Street was a dedicated roadway, which preceded the Brewer and Bell allotment. Since the Brewer and Bell allotment was subject to Virginia Street, the subsequent conveyance to John Lawrence Lavretta was subject to Virginia Street. City of Mobile, 202 Ala. at 202.
“17. The exhibits submitted by the parties in the instant cause were admit[767]

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Bluebook (online)
898 So. 2d 763, 2004 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 618, 2004 WL 1753418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-alabama-state-port-authority-v-mobile-river-terminal-co-alacivapp-2004.