Williams v. Milwaukee Industrial Exposition Ass'n

48 N.W. 665, 79 Wis. 524, 1891 Wisc. LEXIS 129
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 48 N.W. 665 (Williams v. Milwaukee Industrial Exposition Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Milwaukee Industrial Exposition Ass'n, 48 N.W. 665, 79 Wis. 524, 1891 Wisc. LEXIS 129 (Wis. 1891).

Opinion

Cole, C. J.

This is an action of ejectment, brought by the plaintiff to recover forty-six ninety-sixths, undivided, of the east one-half of the block on which the Exposition building is located in the city of Milwaukee. It appears that on October 8, 1835, Byron Kilbourn, who was then the sole owner of the premises, made and recorded a plat of this and of other tracts of land belonging to him, laying the same out in blocks and lots, -with streets and alleys, as and for the town of Milwaukee, on the west side of Milwaukee river.' On the plat were blocks marked “ Public; ” and in the certificate signed by Mr. Kilbourn, on the plat, it is stated that the four vacant spaces marked Public ’ are of the dimensions represented by the lines on the plat, [526]*526and are to be left vacant as public grounds, no building ever to be erected on them by any body corporate or politic, except in case of the town being incorporated, the town authorities may erect a market-house on either of these spaces lying in front of blocks Nos. 36, 52, or 76, but no building shall be erected on the space in front of block No. 24.” The land in question lying in front of block 52 was not marked “ Public ” on the plat offered in evidence, but the certificate clearly identifies it as intended to be public grounds for a park or commons or public square. At the time the plat was made Milwaukee was not incorporated, either as a village or city.

The plat was executed under a statute of Michigan territory, which territory embraced what is now the state of Wisconsin, and which statute, in effect, provided that town plats to be recorded should particularly set forth and describe all public grounds within such town by its boundaries, courses, and extent, and whether it be intended for streets, alleys, commons, or for public uses, and all the lots intended for sale by progressive numbers, and their precise length and width; and the plat was required to be acknowledged before a justice of the peace, a justice of the county court of the proper county where the town lay, or before a judge of the supreme court, and certified under the hand and seal of the judge or justice taking such acknowledgment, and recorded. And it was enacted that such plats should be deemed a sufficient conveyance to vest the fee of the said parcels of land as therein expressed, named, or intended to be for public uses in the county in which such town lay, in trust to and for the uses and purposes therein named, expressed, or intended, and for no other use or purpose whatever. Revised Laws of Mich-' igan, 1827, p. 278, sec. 2, of an act to provide for the recording of town plats, approved April 12, 1827. When a plat was executed and acknowledged in the manner and [527]*527according to the formalities prescribed in this statute, it was declared that it operated as a statutory conveyance of the title of all grounds intended for public purposes.

After the plat was recorded, and in December, 1835, Mr. Kilbourn and wife conveyed to the father of the plaintiff the interest in the premises which is claimed in this action, such interest having become vested in plaintiff, by deeds which were offered in evidence.

The learned trial judge found as facts, among other things, that in 1861 a large building was erected by certain residents of Milwaukee, covering nearly the south half of the square, which building, two yeárs thereafter, began to be used as a public market-house, in which stalls or apartments were let or rented to gardeners and dealers in meats and groceries, and that the building continued to be so used as a public market until the year 1880 or 1881, when the building was torn down, and was replaced by the Exposition building, owned by the Milwaukee Industrial Exposition Association, a defendant herein. The circuit judge further found in effect that in 1815 a corporation was formed, called the “West Side Market Association,” and that in August, 1816, the city of Milwaukee leased to said corporation all the public square in controversy, including the building, for five years, at a nominal rent; further, that in January, 1880, certain named business men, residents of Milwaukee, formed a private corporation wTith a capital stock of $150,000, called The Milwaukee Industnúal Exposition Association for the purpose of constructing and maintaining an exposition for industrial and other objects in Milwaukee. It likewise appears from the finding that the city leased to this association the public square or ground west of block 52, to be used only for an industrial exposition, and for such other purposes of a public nature as the directors of the association might see fit, for a nominal rent, for the term of fifty years from the date of the lease. [528]*528With this statement, our remarks upon the case will be understood.

Some of these findings were excepted to by the defendants, but from the meager evidence set forth in the bill of exceptions we assume they were supported by the testimony. There is really no disagreement as to the essential facts of the case. The controversy is as to the law applicable to them.

The first question which we shall notice is as to the effect of the plat which was recorded. It is insisted by the learned counsel for the plaintiff that the plat is void as a statutory conveyance, "because the justice before whom the acknowledgment was taken did not affix his' seal to the certificate of acknowledgment. It will be seen that the provision, as quoted above, requires that the officer shall certify to the acknowledgment under his ha/nd and seal, and it is said that this was not done in this case. To this objection it is answered that, as the plat was made and recorded nearly fifty-five years ago, having, served every purpose of a recorded plat, it must be conclusively presumed that it was executed in accordance with the existing law, and that the register by mistake omitted to copy the seal on the record, or did not know how'to copy an impression in wax.

The presumption omnia rite et solemniter esse aeta will surely arise from lapse of time; but will a grant be presumed from such testimony as above given? To operate as a conveyance in the fee the plat must be executed in the way and according to the formalities prescribed by the statute. This rule of law was laid down in Gardiner v. Tisdale, 2 Wis. 155; Emmons v. Milwaukee, 32 Wis. 434,—and the principle is well settled upon the authorities. The effect of the Michigan statute obviously is to make a plat, when properly executed and acknowledged, operate as a statutory conveyance of the title of the streets and public grounds designated as such therein to the corporate author[529]*529ities, in trust for the uses specified, and for tte benefit of the adjoining owners and the public generally: Kimball v. Kenosha, 4 Wis. 321. We do not well perceive bow it can be said that the seal of the justice to the acknowledgment was unnecessary, in view of the provision, nor how it could be dispensed with, and it would be a violent presumption, upon the evidence, to assume that it was affixed by the justice when he took the acknowledgment. The question was clearly involved in Baker v. Johnston, 21 Mich. 319, but does not appear to have received much consideration from Campbell, C. J., who gave the opinion in the case. See, also, Grand Rapids v. Hastings, 36 Mich. 122; Diamond Match Co. v. Ontonagon, 72 Mich. 258.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.W. 665, 79 Wis. 524, 1891 Wisc. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-milwaukee-industrial-exposition-assn-wis-1891.