State Ex Rel. Davis v. Meaher

105 So. 562, 213 Ala. 466, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 380
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 25, 1925
Docket1 Div. 364.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 105 So. 562 (State Ex Rel. Davis v. Meaher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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. Davis v. Meaher, 105 So. 562, 213 Ala. 466, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 380 (Ala. 1925).

Opinion

*482 SAYRE, J.

The bill in this cause, filed by the state on the relation of the Attorney General, sought to abate alleged public nuisances consisting of a sawmill, buildings, and other structures maintained in public streets of the city of Mobile and in an area measuring approximately 75 by 2,000 feet lying alongside Bayou Marmotte, or One Mile creek in said city, and shown on the map known as the “Pillans Map,” which is recorded in Map Book 1, at page 1, in the office of the judge of probate of Mobile county, a copy of which is exhibited with the bill, whereon said area is shown as a space without designation. Appellant had relief as against obstructions maintained by some of the appellees on certain streets appearing on the map, and in the projections of the same streets across the area to which we have referred, down to the water’s edge; but other relief was denied, on the finding that there had been no dedication to public use of the area to which for convenience we now refer as “Marmotte wharf” and that, moreover, title to so much of the “Marmotte wharf” and of the streets named in the bill as lie in section 11, township 4 south, range 1 west, had remained in the United States until a time postdating the acts of dedication for which appellant contends, and so that, as to so much of the streets and mentioned area as lie within that section, there had been at the time of the dedications contended for no power to dedicate in the alleged dedicators. Appellees make no complaint of the decree wherein it granted-relief according to the prayer of appellant’s bill.

There is no claim of a dedication under the statute (Code 1923, § 10357 et seq.), the dedication contended for having long antedated the statute.

So then, as to the .“Marmotte wharf,” pretermitting for the time being consideration of the diversity in its parts effected by the street extensions already mentioned and the alleged government ownership of section 11, the contention for appellant is: (1) That this area was definitely and irrevocably dedicated to public use by the platting and sale in 1835-36 of lots in a part of the “Orange Grove tract” — within the bounds of which tract lie all the ways and areas in dispute — as shown on a map or plat projected by A. A. Dexter, by reference to which the lots were sold; and (2) by sales in April, 1859, under judicial decree made by reference to the “Pillans Map,” which is (to the extent thereby shown) a substantial duplicate of the map of the “Orange Grove tract” prepared in 1835, probably, by Dean Knox “at the instance of the proprietors,” except that in the older map 'the inscription “Marmotte wharf” appears in the space now in controversy, where *483 as in tlie “Pillans Map” no such inscription appears.

As for the sales made in 1835-36, we do not find that they effectuated a dedication of the area in controversy. These sales were made with reference to the “Dexter Map,” which shows a plat of the territory south of Hunt street, running east and west; but the “Marmotte wharf” area, as well as the streets, properly so called, in controversy, lies entirely north of Hunt street, from which, at its nearest approach, it is removed by the space of two blocks at least — some 700 or 800 feet.

The “Dexter Map,” of date 1835, was inscribed as follows:

“Plan of a Part of the Orange Grove Tract Reduced from the Original Map. Scale 150 Eeet to an Inch. Drawn by A. A. Dexter, Civil Engineer, May, 1835.”

And in another place:

‘.‘Surveyed by Dean Knox.”

To the extent of the territory shown thereon, the “Dexter Map” is a copy of the “Dean Knox Map,” as a'comparison of the two readily discloses. On the strength of this likeness or identity of appearance and the inscriptions noted above it is asserted that the sales of 1835-36 must be taken as made with reference to the “Dean Knox Map,” and therefore as evidencing a dedication to public use of the “Marmotte wharf” as it appears on the last named map. These sales were made by trustees in pursuance of a deed of trust executed and delivered to them in 1835 by the original proprietors of the entire “Orange Grove tract” (containing in itself more than 300 arpens) and other adjacent tracts. The purpose of the trust was that the trustees (of whom there were three) or a majority of them, should, within six years, sell the land for the use and benefit of the grantors on such terms as a majority of the grantors or their assigns might direct, “provided however that they shall not sell the said lands in greater subdivisions than one acre nor more than one-fourth of the quantity in one year without the unanimous consent of the grantors or their assigns.” By said deed any part of the lands remaining unsold after six years was to be held by the trustees in trust for the grantors or their assigns in proportion to their respective interests. The “Dean Knox Map” is an ancient document (Barker v. Mobile Electric Co., 173 Ala. 36, 55 So. 364), and we do not doubt that the court may nov proceed on the assumption that it was made at the instance of the proprietors, meaning the grantors, or the trustees in the deed of trust mentioned above, acting in harmony with the grantors, and it may be conceded, though such concession would rest upon shrewd surmise rather than upon established facts, that the platting shown thereon was prepared for the purpose of a sale of the land in what may be now designated as city lots. But though that purpose be conceded it does not appear that the proprietors or their trustees ever sold a lot with reference to that map. How then are they or their successors in interest and title to be bound by that map? We have quoted above every inscription on the “Dexter Map” which by any process of inference, however remote, can be held to have reference to the “Knox Map.” These inscriptions are not parts of Dexter’s Map; that is, they contribute nothing .to its delineation of the locality with which it dealt. They are in fact nothing more than an acknowledgment by D'exter of his indebtedness — to Knox, or Knox’s map, it may be conceded — for the information embodied in his (Dexter’s) map. The reference is to an “original map,” and the further inscription is, “Surveyed by Dean Knox.”' This falls short of that clear and distinct designation of a map required by the authorities in the case of a dedication by map, as we shall see. But, conceding for the argument the clearness and distinctness of the designation, it is insufficient to effect a dedication for the reason that the reference is too remote.

It does not follow in law or logic that the reference in the deeds of 1835-36 to the “Dexter Map” should conclude the grantors to every line shown by the “Knox Map,” though the former was in fact a copy, as far as it went, of the latter. Each was a self-contained unity, the “Dexter Map” as much so as the “Knox Map,” and by the reference to the “Dexter Map” — which purported to be, not a part of the plan of the “Orange Grove tract,” as appellant's brief phrases it, but a plan of a part of that tract, and nothing more —it can be fairly inferred only that the grantors in these sales intended to be bound by the lines and inscriptions of that map only, for, otherwise, the reference would have been to some other map — to the “Knox Map,” if they had intended to be bound by that map.

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Bluebook (online)
105 So. 562, 213 Ala. 466, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-davis-v-meaher-ala-1925.