Darling v. Trustee of Carrollton
Darling v. Trustee of Carrollton
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The plan or plat of the town of Port William., now Carrollton, made in the year 1796, defines the boundaries of the many lots laid off, and the streets and alleys on which they bordered. All the streets and alleys 'were not only laid off and dedicated to public use, but an actual conveyance made to trustees for that purpose. One of the streets known as Third Street, or a part thereof, being 66 feet in width for in-lots, and 33' feet between out-lots, has been in the possession of the appellant, Darling, and his vendors and those claiming under them, for thirty or forty years; and that portion of the street of which they were so possessed ha,s never been used or controlled by the trustees for the public use, but on the contrary, has been all the time in the actual possession of Darling and his vendors, and for thirty years past under an enclosure. The town authorities, however, as well as. the citizens, or many of them have been .continuously asserting the right of the town to the possession of this street, for the purpose for which it was dedicated.
The only question presented by the record is whether the pos-sessibn and claim of Darling, and those under whom he holds, has been adverse to that by the town, for if so, such a possession, with an actual, enclosure for fifteen years, would bar the right of recovery. Win. Root, it seems, owned and was in the' actual possession of these lots in the year 1859, and for many years prior thereto; but although he was in the possession and had the legal title thereto, still he had no title of record to the street in controversy, upon which they bordered; and: if the parties in. possession, claiming to hold under Root, have now any legal right, it must originate from an adverse holding on their part, as well as that of their vendors, Root and Donaldson. In January, 1859, Root made an assignment of his property, including, those lots to Donaldson and Rodenback, for the payment of his debts, and in the conveyance for that purpose expressly designates the lots he owned by the numbers appearing in the plat of the town, and nowhere attempts to convey or pass the title to the street or streets upon which they bounded.
The purchaser, in buying this property at decretal sale, or from the assignees, must look at the town plat in order to see what he has
Now if these various owners of the town lots described, claimed to hold adversely to the town, why was it that in the many conveyances from 1859 down; they have never asserted any title to the streets or attempted to pass the title to the purchaser? Darling sold to Rod'enback and others, and in his deed sells the lots by their numbers as appears on the plat of the town, thus leaving the street undisposed of, and for no other reason than that the holding was only subject to the right of the town trustees to open them' for the public use when they saw proper. Root, in his deed, passed no title to his assignees to this street, nor did he attempt to pass any, nor did his vendees even attempt to pass any; but on the contrary, the purchaser from Darling disclaims any, title to the street under these several purchases. Dpnaldson and Darling entered on these lots as purchasers, deriving title from the same source. The boundary bought by them is clearly defined, and their adverse holding must be confined to what they bought when they took possession. If the title of these streets is not in the town, it is still in Root. The title, however, is in the trustee. They have never been divested
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.