State Ex Rel. Bedard v. Village of Lockbourne

590 N.E.2d 1327, 69 Ohio App. 3d 452, 1990 Ohio App. LEXIS 4137
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 18, 1990
DocketNo. 89AP-1372.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 590 N.E.2d 1327 (State Ex Rel. Bedard v. Village of Lockbourne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Bedard v. Village of Lockbourne, 590 N.E.2d 1327, 69 Ohio App. 3d 452, 1990 Ohio App. LEXIS 4137 (Ohio Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

*454 McCormac, Judge.

Appellants, Gary and Clara Bedard, appeal from the judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas denying their request for a writ of mandamus to be issued to the Village Council of Lockbourne, Ohio to vacate its action granting appellee Dorothy Bobst Needham permission to place a mobile home on lot 84 and to require a proper application for her use subject to public knowledge and debate and to issue an injunction requiring her to remove the mobile home.

Appellants assert the following assignments of error:

“I. The trial court committed prejudicial error in finding that there was no evidence that Lock Street was ever dedicated.

“II. The trial court erred in concluding that the defendant, Bobst family, owned the 35 x 150 foot tract east of lot 84 (which strip falls wholly within Lock Street).

“A. The 1896 deed to George Gouldner of the 35 x 150 foot strip of land east of lot 84 as found in Deed Book Volume 287, page 275 (Defendant’s Exhibit # 3) is a nullity.

“HI. The trial court committed prejudicial error in concluding that the appellants received 15.5 feet (of the width) of Lock Street pursuant to their request and the subsequent grant by the village of Lockbourne to vacate the easterly one-half portion of Lock Street.

“IV. The trial court committed prejudicial error by concluding that the county [sic, village] did not act improperly in granting the defendants (Bobst family) permission to put their mobile home on their (Bobst) property.

“V. The report of the referee filed on June 20,. 1989, fails to satisfy the spiritual and specific requirements of Civil Rule 53(E)(1) for the reasons that the report sets forth no findings of fact, no conclusions of law, and arguably no recommendations to the trial judge. These deficiencies preclude the trial judge from making an independent analysis of the issues involved in the dispute.”

The dispute in this matter concerns the ownership of a parcel of land which separates lots 84 and 86 in the village of Lockbourne, Franklin County, Ohio. Lockbourne was originally platted in 1837. Some time thereafter, the original plat was lost or destroyed and a second plat was prepared by the Franklin County Engineer under the direction of the county commissioners and filed of record in 1892. As platted, lot 84, owned in fee by appellee, Dorothy Bobst Needham, is separated from lot 86, owned in fee by appellants, by a sixty-six-foot-by-one-hundred-fifty-foot parcel designated on the plat as Lock Street. *455 Both lots 84 and 86 are fifty feet wide. It appears from the evidence that Lock Street has not been used as a public thoroughfare nor has any attempt been made by the village of Lockboume, also an appellee herein, to pave or otherwise improve the parcel. The evidence also indicates that, for at least a portion of the time between 1837 and 1946, a house stood on the property in question.

In 1979, appellants applied to the village of Lockboume to vacate the eastern half of Lock Street, which is adjacent to their lot. The village council passed Ordinance No. 5-79, vacating the east half of Lock Street between Spring Alley and Commerce Street. In 1985, appellants were granted a building permit to construct an addition to their home which, when built, extended into the vacated portion of Lock Street.

In 1986, the Lockboume Village Council passed a resolution permitting appellee to place a mobile home measuring sixty-six feet in length on lot 84 after an existing structure was demolished. Since lot 84 is only fifty feet in width, the trailer necessarily extends beyond the limits of lot 84. However, appellee contends that she is the fee owner of a thirty-five-by-one-hundred-fifty-foot strip of land immediately adjacent to her lot by chain of title dating to an original 1896 deed. Appellee contends that Lock Street was never properly dedicated to the village of Lockboume and, therefore, the village never acquired fee title to the land and she holds superior title to the thirty-five feet.

The distances and amount of property owned are of importance because of Lockboume Ordinance No. 171, passed by the Lockboume Village Council on March 12, 1974. Section 2 of Ordinance No. 171 provides:

“Section 2: That no house trailer used for residential or living purposes shall be located less than twenty feet from any public street, alley, residential or commercial building, nor shall any house trailer be located less than ten feet from any real property boundary line in said Village.”

Appellants argue that, since appellee’s trailer is only eight feet ten inches from the center line of Lock Street and therefore only eight feet ten inches from the vacated portion which is now owned by appellants, and since it is only thirteen feet ten inches from appellants’ expanded residence, the council acted arbitrarily and unreasonably when it granted appellee permission to locate her trailer in such a fashion. Appellee argues that, since she owns thirty-five feet of the platted Lock Street, her mobile home is a sufficient distance from the lot line and she is not in violation of the Lockboume ordinance. She contends that it is appellants and not she who encroached upon the property of another.

*456 Appellants’ first four assignments of error involve the same issue and will be discussed together. The question is who owns the sixty-six-by-one-hundred-fifty-foot strip of land platted as Lock Street. Appellants claim ownership of thirty-three feet on the east side of Lock Street by way of council’s vacation of a duly dedicated street. Appellee contends that the street was never properly dedicated and therefore, her title, dating to 1896, is paramount and vests her with a fee interest in thirty-five feet on the west side of Lock Street. The trial court concluded that Lock Street was never properly dedicated and, hence, appellee’s title was superior; nonetheless, the court concluded that appellant was the owner of 15.5 feet off the eastern side of the street by way of council’s dedication. The figure 15.5 feet was arrived at by excluding thirty-five feet from the sixty-six-foot width of Lock Street and concluding that, since the vacating ordinance failed to address the width of the land vacated, only one-half of the thirty-one feet was actually vacated. While portions of each argument may have merit, we do not agree totally with any theory advanced.

It must first be noted that, despite the fact that both parties have cited R.C. Chapter 7 in its current version in support of their positions, that is not the law applicable to this action. The pertinent law is that which was in effect at the time of the original platting, 1837, and the subsequent replatting, 1892.

Ground may be dedicated to public use either by statute or according to the rules of the common law. Lessee of Fulton v. Mehrenfeld (1858), 8 Ohio St. 440. The statute in effect at the time the original plat was filed provided that the original proprietors of the town must prepare a plat, including lots to be sold and public grounds to be dedicated, acknowledge the plat by signing it in front of one authorized to acknowledge deeds, and record the plat with the county recorder. 29 Ohio Laws 350-351.

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Bluebook (online)
590 N.E.2d 1327, 69 Ohio App. 3d 452, 1990 Ohio App. LEXIS 4137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-bedard-v-village-of-lockbourne-ohioctapp-1990.