Territory v. Deegan

3 Mont. 82
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 Mont. 82 (Territory v. Deegan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Territory v. Deegan, 3 Mont. 82 (Mo. 1878).

Opinion

BlaKE, J.

The appellant has been indicted and convicted of the crime of obstructing a street and alley within the town site of Helena. The facts were agreed upon in the court below ■ and it is necessary for us to state those on which this opinion is based. [86]*86The appellant entered into the actual and exclusive possession of, and enclosed a part of the public domain in August, 1866, which was afterward included within the exterior limits of the town site of Helena. No street or alley had been marked and used or traveled on upon this tract before the town site was surveyed. The ways, which are mentioned in the indictment, were surveyed and the plat designating them on the town site was accepted and filed by the proper officers in 1869. The appellant has not been disturbed in the possession of the land on which the street and alley ere located, and his fences and buildings standing thereon have not been removed since 1866. In 1869, after the publication of the official notice in the newspaper according to law, the appellant filed with the trustee of the town site seven applications for the lots which had been surveyed on this tract, and afterward received deeds to the same. No portion of the land, which is included within the street and alley, was described in the application or the deeds, and neither the appellant, nor any other person, ever filed any application therefor or received a deed to it. At the time when the town site was surveyed and the plat was accepted and filed, the appellant owned valuable improvements consisting of fences, sheds and corrals, which were situated on the land that had been designated as a street and alley.

The appellant admits that he erected and maintains the obstructions which are specified in the indictment, but denies that the street and alley have been established according to the statutes of the Territory, and claims the premises in dispute as his private property. The appellant relies on the case of Hall v. Ashby, 2 Mon. 489, and the authorities there cited to support his position. This court held that the trustee of a town site had no power to create an alley which had not been designated upon the plat of the town site of Helena, but this principle is not applicable to the facts before us and therefore is not decisive of this action.

Some sections of the act of the legislative assembly concerning town sites have been cited and construed by this court in the case of Schnepel v. Mellen, post, and we comment upon them in brief terms. The claimants of town lots are required to file in the [87]*87office of the trustee a statement of their claims within two months from the date of the first publication of the notice in the newspaper. Cod. Sts. 548, § 5. The claimants of lots must make proof of their claims and pay for them within six months from and after the expiration of the notice. § 7. The claimants who feel aggrieved by the decision of the trustee have the right to appeal to the district court. § 12. After the plat of the town has been accepted and filed in the office of the proper county recorder the streets and alleys designated in such plat shall remain dedicated to public use forever.” §'4.

The indictment was filed in the court below, November 8,1876. If the dedication of the street and alley has been extinguished by the adverse possession of the appellant, the indictment has been improperly found. Upon this subject the authorities are conflicting, but the intention of the law-making power in defining the acts by which the street and alley have been “ dedicated to public use forever ” can be carried into effect by following the decisions of the supreme court of California. In Hoadley v. San Francisco, 50 Cal. 265, Mr. Justice Rhodes in the opinion says:

“ When lands have been held adversely under such circumstances and for such a period that the title held by a private person, or by a municipality, or by the State as a private proprietor, would be extinguished under the operation of the Statute of Limitations, will such adverse possession also extinguish a public use if the lands have been dedicated to that purpose; will it also bar the rights which the public gained by the dedication? We are of the opinion that the question must be answered in the negative. The Statute of Limitations was not intended as a bar to the assertion by the public of rights of that character.”

To the same effect are Sawyer v. San Francisco, 50 Cal. 370; San Francisco v. Sullivan, 50 id. 603.

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Related

City of Billings v. Pierce Packing Co.
161 P.2d 636 (Montana Supreme Court, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Mont. 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-v-deegan-mont-1878.