Whittington v. Com'rs. of Crisfield

88 A. 232, 121 Md. 387, 1913 Md. LEXIS 57
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 88 A. 232 (Whittington v. Com'rs. of Crisfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whittington v. Com'rs. of Crisfield, 88 A. 232, 121 Md. 387, 1913 Md. LEXIS 57 (Md. 1913).

Opinion

Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Upon a bill filed by the appellant the Circuit Court for Somerset County issued an injunction restraining the appellee, a municipal corporation, its servants, and agents from entering upon and trespassing upon the property mentioned in the bill, and from removing therefrom any of the buildings thereon or otherwise damaging the same. An answer was filed by the appellee. The case was heard upon the bill, answer, replication and testimony, and from the order of the Court below dissolving the injunction this appeal was taken.

It is alleged in the bill that the appellant is the owner in fee of a lot of ground in Crisfield fronting on Main street, and extending back sixty or seventy feet to the line of the New York, Philadelphia and Norfolk Railroad; that the lot is improved by a dwelling house and store erected thereon thirty-five years ago; that she and those under whom she claims have been in the continuous, exclusive, notorious, and adverse possession of the lot for more than thirty-five years as well as holding the same by patent from the State and by mesne conveyance and inheritance; that the defendant in 1908 had entered-upon the premises and removed therefrom a small building, and had notified her in writing to remove the remaining building within sixty days from November *389 30th, 1909, otherwise it would ' remove the same at her expense.

The answer of the appellee denied that the plaintiff is the owner of the lot, and asserted that it was a public street or highway, and from time to time had been so used during the period mentioned in the bill, although obstructed for many years by the building erected thereon; that the land had been dedicated to public use by its owners; that the defendant had accepted said dedication, and exercised the rights of user thereof, and has claimed and still claims the same to be a public street or highway.

There are many other allegations contained in the bill and answer presenting the conflicting claims of the parties, but the statements we have made indicates sufficiently the real question in this case. It is this: Is the lot of ground claimed by the appellant a public street or highway? Before the appellee should be permitted to enter upon the premises and remove the appellant’s buildings, its right to do so should be established by clear and convincing facts. The law will not permit such an act where the right is doubtful, or where it would be against equity and good conscience.

The record contains a great deal of testimony. We have given it careful consideration, and, without discussing it in detail, we will refer to those facts which we consider essential to the decision of the controlling question presented by the pleadings.

About the year 1858 a patent was issued by the State to Michael Somers, Hance Lawson and John W. Crisfield for a tract of low or marsh- land on which the town of Crisfield is now in part built, and about the year 1868 they had the land surveyed and platted into lots and proposed streets. One of the streets shown on the plat, which was recorded in the office of the clerk of Somerset County, was called Cross street (now known as Seventh street), which ran from Somer’s Cove on one side to Annamessex River on the other, and crossing also the Eastern Shore Railroad, now known as *390 the New York, Philadelphia and Norfolk Railroad, and extending about one-fourth of a mile across the marsh land to the river.

Another street, now called Main street, is shown on the plat. This street runs practically east and west, and in close proximity to the railroad.

Cross street, as shown upon the plat, is sixty feet wide, and the lot of ground in dispute, in this case, constitutes the hed of what is claimed to be Cross street between Main street and the railroad.

After making the plat, the owners had another plat made which narrowed Cross or Seventh street from sixty feet to fifty feet, and stopped the street at the intersection of Main street opposite the land in controversy.

Iianee Lawson, one of the owners of the land, erected a store building in the hed of Cross street as shown on the plat of 1868. The exact date when this building was erected, whether before or after the making of that plat, is not certainly fixed by the evidence, — one witness, Elijah T. Somers, testified that it was built by his- father for Mr. Lawson about 186 Y or 1868. Afterwards some improvements to the store were made by Mr. Lawson, and during this work some dispute or question seems to have arisen between him and the Commissioners of the town as to his rights in the' premises and John W. Crisfield who was a member of the bar, was called in, and at a meeting held on the ground the matter was apparently settled in favo.r of the right of Mr. Lawson to make the improvement on the lot. This occurred, according to the evidence of one of the witnesses, about twenty-five years before the institution of this suit. The building erected by Mr. Lawson was used as a dwelling on the second floor and as a store below, and one of the witnesses testified that he had been living on the property for thirty-five years continuously.

John W. Crisfield, one of the patentees and owners, conveyed his one-third undivided interest in the property to *391 Thomas J. Dixon and William H. Roach, who held as tenants in common with Somers and Lawson. Mr. Roach died in 1888, and upon appropriate proceedings had in the Circuit Court for Somerset County a decree was passed for the sale of all the property held in common, and N. Walter Dixon was appointed trustee to make the sale. He sold the lot now in dispute at public sale on the 18th day of January, 1890, after it had been, so far as the appellee is concerned, in the continuous and undisputed possession of Hance Lawson for about twenty-two years, to John H. Holland, and reported the sale to the Court. The sale was finally ratified, the purchase price paid, and a deed executed and delivered by the trusteee to the purchaser.

In the trustee’s report of sale the property sold Avas described as follows:

“All that lot north of Main street, where stands store house occupied by Noah Sterling, and lying between the premises formerly belonging to Elijah Maddrix and the premises formerly belonging to George L. Moore, and extending from Main street to the railroad premises, building not included, it being the personal property of Hance Lawson’s estate. And your trustee sold said lot to John H. Holland at and for the sum of two hundred and fifty-five dollars, he being at that sum the highest bidder therefor. And the said Holland elected the all-cash terms of sale, and has fully paid said purchase money. And your trustee reports that by agreement with Emiline Lawson, widow of-Manee Lawson, he sold all of said real estate clear of any incumbrance of her doAver, she electing to take in lieu thereof a sum to be allowed by the Court; which agreement in writing is filed herewith.”

In February, 1891, Mr. Holland bought from the administrator of Hance Lawson the building upon the property consisting of the store house and dwelling. He built a shoe shop on the lot, which the appellee has removed, and he also *392

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Bluebook (online)
88 A. 232, 121 Md. 387, 1913 Md. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whittington-v-comrs-of-crisfield-md-1913.