Vance v. Lyons

19 Ohio App. 225, 1924 Ohio App. LEXIS 107
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 8, 1924
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio App. 225 (Vance v. Lyons) 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
Vance v. Lyons, 19 Ohio App. 225, 1924 Ohio App. LEXIS 107 (Ohio Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Mattck, J.

This proceeding is to review a judgment of the Common Pleas denying the plaintiff any recovery for damages growing out of an alleged trespass. The issues arose upon the amended petition claiming such damages to plaintiff’s lands, which were particularly described as certain lots in Pair Haven, Grallia county, Ohio, “and also a strip 45 feet wide, lying along the upper or north side of said lots.”

[226]*226The defendants for answer denied generally, but in open court agreed that ‘ ‘ the allegations of the petition as to possession are true as stated in the petition as to adverse possession for more than 30 years.”

The only question at issue in the case was whether the plaintiff was the owner of the strip above mentioned. While her ownership was denied, the .foregoing stipulation in connection with the averment in the amended petition that the plaintiff had been in the continuous, open, notorious and adverse possession of the strip under claim of title and right for more than thirty years was dangerously near to an admission that the plaintiff was entitled to a judgment.

The trial court, without a jury, rendered judgment for the defendants, and in so adjudging had to find that the plaintiff was not the owner of the strip in question. There was some meagre testimony, in addition to the stipulation mentioned, that the plaintiff had title to the atrip by prescription, and she exhibited a quitclaim deed to the strip, which deed was made by one who had acquired part of the lots mentioned at sheriff’s sale, the sheriff’s deed purporting to convey the strip to plaintiff’s grantor by this description, “and also the strip on the north side of the above described lots.”

It does not appear by the pleading, but it casually appears in the testimony, that the defendants are the trustees of Gallipolis 'Township and that the alleged trespass consisted ini removing the plaintiff’s fence from what the defendants claimed to be the highway, and in destroying [227]*227some trees, etc., which were also claimed to he in the highway. The defendants were sued personally for damages. The real question which they probably desired to raise was that the strip mentioned in the amended petition was a part of the highway and that the plaintiff had unlawfully encroached thereon with the fence, trees, etc., and that they were performing an official duty in removing the same. The question sought to be tried out, therefore, seems to have been whether the strip in question was a part of the public highway, and this required a determination of the width of the highway, as no controversy arose as to the location of the north line of the roadway.

As a matter of law and history the court knows that the lands in question were a partj of the Ohio Company’s Purchase, and that Fair Haven was one of the towns laid out by that company. That company so divided the domain granted it by the United States that each member of the company was allotted, among other tracts, one town lot. (Peter’s Ohio Lands, 251.) The lands in question were platted to carry out the plan of the Ohio Company for partition in severalty. This was in 1796, and, of course, prior to statehood and prior to settlement of the proposed town. The territorial legislature in 18'00 passed an act requiring future town plats to be acknowledged and recorded, and these statutes have continued in substantially' the same form until now and must be strictly complied with in order to constitute a statutory dedication of lands to public use. That same act, however, provided that town plats theretofore made should within one year thereafter [228]*228be recorded in tbe office of the recorder of the proper county. If the Ohio Company, in compliance with that act, caused its town plat of Fair Haven to be recorded in Washington county, of which Gallia county was then a part, a statutory dedication was accomplished, otherwise it was. not. The record before us shows nothing bearing on the matter of record, so no statutory dedication was shown.

'A dedication may, however, be at common law. This is not to be confused with a highway arising by prescriptive use. It arises when the owner intends that his property shall be devoted to public use, opens it to the public, and the public accepts the same.

“If the owner of land lays it off into blocks and streets and plats the same and sells the lots with reference to such plat, he thereby dedicates the streets indicated thereon to the public.” 13 Ruling ICase Law, 24.

Knowing that Fair Haven was one of the towns planned by the Ohio Company a court needs no proof that the owners in .1796 contemplated streets adjacent to the several lots platted by such owners. There next arises the question whether the public accepted the same. In modern times acceptance of a common-law dedication is most satisfactorily shown by acts of the public authorities in improving and repairing the highway. No such evidence of acceptance was. possible in early days and the common law did not require it. No attempt has been made by legislation to fix any mode of procedure for mailing an acceptance where the property dedicated is not within a municipal corpora[229]*229tion. The clearest enunciation of the common law principles that has come under our observation is that reproduced in the note to 27 American Decisions, 565, from Guthrie v. New Haven, 31 Conn., 308, as follows:

“These principles authorize the gift, estop the giver from recalling it, and presume an acceptance by the public where it is shown to be of common convenience and necessity, and therefore beneficial to them. For the purpose of showing that it is beneficial, an express acceptance by the town or other corporation within whose limits it is situate and who are liable for its repair, the reparation of it by the officers of such corporation, or a tacit acquiescence in the open public use of it is important;.and so are the acts of individuals, such as giving it a name by which it becomes generally known, recognizing it upon maps and in directions, using it as a descriptive boundary in deeds of the adjoining land, or as a reference for locality in advertisements of property, etc., and any other acts which recognize its usefulness and tend to show an approval of the gifts by the members of the community immediately cognizant of it; but the principal evidence of ,its beneficial character will be the actual use of it as a highway, without objection, by those who have occasion to use it for that purpose.”

There is no dispute that the highway in question was used, but it is claimed that the use was confined to a width of about fifteen feet. The extent of the user, however, does not define the extent of the acceptance. It is analogous to a contract. To illustrate: The owner offers to the [230]*230public a highway, say of sixty feet. He contemplates thereby not the immediate, but the future needs of the public. In due time the public uses twenty feet of the way. It uses no more because it needs no more. This user is not to be interpreted with reference to the amount of land actually used. The user is an acceptance, and the acceptance relates to the offer and is an acceptance of the offer actually made, and the result is a completion of the dedication of the entire amount offered.

• There are exceptions to the rule, but the weight of authority is thus expressed in 18 Corpus Juris, at page 88:

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Related

Guthrie v. Town of New Haven
31 Conn. 308 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1863)
Lane v. Kennedy
13 Ohio St. 42 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1861)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio App. 225, 1924 Ohio App. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vance-v-lyons-ohioctapp-1924.