Vick v. Mayor of Vicksburg

2 Miss. 379
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2 Miss. 379 (Vick v. Mayor of Vicksburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vick v. Mayor of Vicksburg, 2 Miss. 379 (Mich. 1837).

Opinion

S. S. Boyd,

(one of the judges appointed to determine the cause,) delivered the opinion of the court.

The bill in this case was filed by the complainants in the superior court of chancery at the last July term, for the purpose of quieting their title to a tract of ground designated as “ commons” and “ Levee street,” on the recorded plat of the town of Vicksburg, and to enjoin and restrain the defendants from prosecuting several actions of ejectment, then pending in their favor, against the complainants in the circuit court of Warren county, for the recovery of the same tract.

A perpetual injunction was also prayed for, to prevent the defendants from proceedingfurther to erect permanent buildings, ware houses, and store rooms on the premises, to the common nuisance of the citizens of Vicksburg and the public. The title to this strip of land, lying between the front row of lots and the Mississippi [427]*427river, and to the easement therein, and the use thereof, is claimed in the bill to be vested in the complainants as trustees and representatives of the rights and interests of the citizens of Vicksburg, by virtue of several acts of dedication, and the statutes of the state, constituting them a body politic. The answers of the defendants, denying any dedication of the property in controversy, and setting up affirmatively, their claim to it, under Newit Vick directly, or by derivative title, thus tracing their rights and interests, whatever they might be, to the same source with the complainants, narrowed the inquiry before the chancellor to a single question. The ultimate right of fee was not in controversy. Neither the full assertion of their fiduciary character, and the establishment of the easement by the complainants, nor the complete vindication of the acts of the defendants, in erecting the buildings and nuisances complained of, and in prosecuting their actions of ejectment, involved the decision of that point.

Indeed, the right to the fee might be decided to be in the appellants, in perfect consistency with all the claims set up in the bill, on behalf of the appellees. The easement is bufan incumbrance, and, if properly shown to exist, may be perpetual.

Both parties rested their title on Newit Vick, and recurred to him, as its only source: and the case, thus presented, leaves his estate, real and personal, as it stood at the time of his death, except so far as he had diminished or abridged it. It passes to his heirs general, unless that disposition is altered by devise: it passes absolute, and untrammelled, except by his act. The complainants, then, in order to have succeeded before the chancellor, in the prayer of their bill, must have shown that those whom they im-pleaded, had no just right to do the acts complained of; because those acts were inconsistent with the rights acquired by them, through their ancestor. So far as this controversy was concerned, the defendants, had, at all times, absolute and full right of possession to all the estate of Newit Vick, after his death; unless those who demanded the interposition of the court, could show a restriction or abridgment by him, of that right. This was the situation of the case, as it was presented to the chancellor; and, in granting the prayer of the bill, he, in effect, decided that the estate [428]*428of Newit Vick, or that part of it embraced in the recorded plat of the town, was encumbered with an easement to the extent claimed in the bill, and that a perpetual right of possession to the “commons” and “ Levee street,” in opposition to the appellants, existed in favor of the appellees, as trustees, for the use of the citizens of Vicksburg.

The same points are now before us, on this appeal. And we are to decide, whether complainants have shown a case sufficient to prevent the defendants from asserting their title, by devise, from Newit Vick, to that portion of his estate here in controversy.

Their claim is of an incorporeal hereditament; a perpetual in-cumbrance or easement; and that claim is based upon the ground of a dedication, or appropriation for their benefit.

This dedication is alleged to have been made in various ways. As to that portion designated as “ commons,” in contradistinction from “ Levee street,” the acts of Newit Vick, in his lifetime, and of John Lane, as administrator, with the will annexed, are relied on as the foundation of complainant’s title. In regard to what is known as “ Levee street,” the claim of the easement is rested partly upon the proceedings of commissioners appointed by the probate court of Warren county, and partly upon the acts of Lane, as administrator, and of the heirs and devisees of the testator.

We do not consider these distinctions and divisions of much importance, except so far as they may aid in arranging and simplifying the various proofs, exhibits and pleadings, in the cause. The acts of dedication, if they exist, must, in order to affect the rights of the defendants, connect themselves with their ancestor, or proceed from themselves. The executor of Newit Vick, the administrator with the will annexed, and the commissioners of the probate court, in their appropriate spheres, represent the testator. Their acts are his acts, and his heirs and devisees cannot gainsay them. Their own acts stand upon the same footing; and they may also adopt or ratify what has been done by others, and thus make it their own, so as to be bound by it.

The questions, then, resolve themselves into these: — Has there [429]*429been a dedication of the easement in question, by Newit Vick or his authority, or by the defendants themselves?

The common law rules, in reference to the acquisition of real property, and the rights and interests of a permanent kind, growing out of land, have been materially modified and relaxed by a long train of decisions, connected with the subject of dedication. A direct act of dedication would probably still require a deed or writing. 3 Kent, 434. And the act, of whatever character it may -be, by which the public right is claimed, must come from the owner of the fee; 4 B. & C. 574; 1 Str. 999; 5 B. & A. 454. And it must be done openly, and with a deliberate purpose. 1 Campbell, 262; 1 Greenleaf, 111.

Something of inaccuracy and confusion will be found in most of the American decisions, when an attempt is made to draw the distinction between express and implied dedications. The proof of a dedication to public or charitable purposes, may be of various grades. The terms implied,” or by implication,” should more properly refer to the testimony, or grades of evidence than to the fact to be proved. Prescription supposes a grant, and may amount to one, for all legal purposes; 3 Kent, 452. So a grant may be presumed, from circumstances inconsistent with any other supposition, and which estop the grantor, by matters in joats, from denying it; 6 Peters’s S. C. Rep. 439; Co. Litt. 56.

These remarks may serve to give greater certainty to our inquiries, as to what acts will be sufficient to establish the fact of a dedication of commons” or highways to public use.

For that purpose, a deed, or written grant, is certainly not required; 2 Strange, 1004.

Nor is it necessary that there should be a grantee in existence, to take the fee, out of which the incorporeal hereditament is to arise, at the time of the supposed dedication.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Miss. 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vick-v-mayor-of-vicksburg-miss-1837.