Court Opinion

ID: 8019616
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:09:04.213067+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:36:35.100561
License: Public Domain

BOND, J.
I. Plaintiff, the city of Hardin, sets up title to a certain strip of land about one hundred and fifty feet wide, lying between the Wabash Railroad *413tracks and lots 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 13 of the original town of Hardin.
Yarions persons were joined as parties defendant, but on disclaiming any interést the suit was dismissed as to all but Lafayette Ferguson and J. W. Cunningham, who claim title and possession to that part of the strip lying south of lots 12 and 13.
The evidence shows that the title emanated through original grant from the United States and that all deeds introduced, both by the city and by the two defendants, run from a common source of title; that in 1869 the strip of land in controversy was dedicated 'to the town of Hardin by the then owners, Messrs. Shaw, Hughes, Spurlock, McGrinnis and Porter; that in 1888 James Hughes (one of the signers of the dedication) platted and recorded an addition to the town of Hardin, block one of which appears to include the portion of the disputed strip lying south of Block 13 of the original town; that until the year 1912 there was no apparent dispute as to the ownership by the city of this entire strip of land; that for thirty years it had been used for public purposes; that the city had erected thereon the town jail; also public hitch racks; that trees had been- planted on the western end and the open space had been used as a sort of city park, while from time to time various “shows” or circuses had been allowed to erect their tents there; that in the early years there was also a town well there, but that this had fallen into disuse.
There was also testimony to show that the city had run tiling through the greater length of the strip in order to drain it and make it usable; also that a street sixty feet wide had been run the entire length of the strip and at several points streets had been cut through which ran south over and across the tracks of the Wabash Railroad Company; that in the year 1912 the defendant Cunningham, in looking for land near the railroad tracks to be used for unloading purposes, approached the then mayor, Mr. Brunnsworth, to ascertain if he could use the portion now in dispute (i. e. that lying south of lots 12 and 13) and was told the matter would be taken up and. *414investigated. Later the mayor reported that the city held no title to this land and Cunningham- then procured quitclaim deeds from the heirs of James Hughes and also Thomas McGinnis (both signers of the dedication).'
The evidence also tends to show that he only paid a small price for the land; that later Cunningham leased a part of the land he had thus procured to John Shelton, who erected a barn thereon, which afterwards burned and never was rebuilt.
In 1914 the city instituted this suit to quiet its title to the entire strip. A jury being waived the court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff and defendants appealed.

Dedication of Land to Unincorporated Town.

II. The questions presented by this appeal are whether the respondent city acquired the property in controversy by a valid dedication, either common law or statutory, and, if so, whether it is estopped to assert such title against defendant Cunningham by reason of the recording of the plat of Hughes’s Addition in 1888. Taking these in order; the original plat of the dedication recorded in 1869 and prior to the incorporation of the town of Hardin in 1870, was not invalid for that reason, since the dedication of land to the public is legally effective, although at the time there is no corporate entity or artificial grantee in whom the title is vested. [Board of Regents v. Painter, 102 Mo. l. c. 469.] In this respect a dedication differs from a grant, which presupposes the existence of a competent taker of the estate conveyed. [13 Cyc. 439, par. 2 and cases cited.]
It is of the essence of a dedication that it should appropriate the land for public use and that such should be the intent of the owner and that it should be accepted by the public. It may be effected without any writing, not being within the Statute of Frauds, and all of its elements may be shown by positive or circumstantial evidence of acts in pais. [Heitz v. St. Louis, 110 Mo. 618; McGrath v. Nevada, 188 Mo. l. c. 107; Curran v. St. Joseph, 264 Mo. l. c. 659; Benton v. St. Louis, 217 Mo. l. *415c. 705.] In many states provision is made for plats of and additions to villages and cities and the recording of such plats. These are termed statutory dedications. [R. S. 1909, ch. 97, secs. 10290 et seq.; 13 Cyc. 440.] Such dedications and their legal effect are controlled wholly by the terms of the statute authorizing them, but they do not in any way restrict the common-law power of an owner to devote his land, or some easements therein, to the use of the public. Hence the rule is that a statutory dedication imperfectly made will be held as valid as a common law dedication if good as such. [Rose v. St. Charles, 49 Mo. 509.] All dedications when complete are irrevocable.
The record in this ease shows the due filing and recording in 1869 of a plat of Hardin which embraced the land in suit. That plat designates the streets, alleys and subdivisions of the town, except that it does not subdivide the small portion involved in this action. The town as laid off on the plat was then, or immediately afterward, incorporated as a village and made use of the portion described in this suit for public purposes, as heretofore stated, from 1869 tc 1912, when the defendants first asserted their claims.
Waiving the imperfection of this plat as a statutory dedication, there is no escape from the conclusion that it was a clear and unequivocal devotion of their property made by the owners and signatories of the plat. And it is equally evident that the town of Hardin accepted the trust to it on behalf of the public by manifold and normal acts of user from 1869 to 1912, as shown in the foregoing statement of facts. Under the law this completed the dedication and invested the town with the title to and easements in the land in trust to the public. Hence there is no doubt that it should have recovered against appellant Ferguson.

*416
Estoppel.

*415ni. It is urged, however, that the respondent municipality is estopped to enforce its rights as to the lot claimed by appellant Ferguson for that a portion of it was described in a subsequent plat of an addition to the *416town filed by the ancestor of the grantors, who quit-claimed to him. That view is untenable for the reason that since the first plat was a valid dedication, the city could not lose its title because a- portion of the dedicated strip was included in an addition subsequently laid out by one of the signatories of the original dedication. Nor is there any evidence the city induced the defendants to take any steps to their prejudice by allowing the plat of the subsequent addition to be filed. Under the circumstances shown in the record no estoppel arose against the respondent city. [Clay Products v. St. Louis, 246 Mo. l. c. 461; Wright v. Doniphan, 169 Mo. l. c. 614; St. Louis v. Mo. Pac. Ry., 114 Mo. l. c. 24; Williams v. St. Louis, 120 Mo. 403; Blodgett v. Perry, 97 Mo. l. c. 273; St. Louis v. Gorman, 29 Mo. 593; Elliott on Roads & Streets (2 Ed.), sec. 884.]
It follows that the judgment in this case must be affirmed. It is so ordered.
All concur.