Judges: Funk, Pardee, Washburn
Filed Date: 12/23/1925
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This is an action on appeal, in which the plaintiff claimed that the defendant, the city of Akron, was taking a part of his lot for street purposes, and asked that the city be enjoined and that his title be quieted. 1
The evidence establishes that in 1825 there was recorded a plat of what is now a part of the city of Akron, and that' said plat established on the west side thereof an alley twenty feet wide, known
The city engineer having prepared the plat of the subdivision in 1884, and having surveyed the property and placed monuments thereon showing said narrow strip of Pine alley as being included in and a part of the adjoining lot of said subdivision, and the city having by the acceptance of said plat ratified and confirmed that which had been done by the city engineer, and the plaintiff having acted in absolute .good faith and purchased and paid for said lot, relying on said acts of the city and its engineer, and having made valuable improvements on a part of said strip, which indicated a permanent and adverse occupancy inconsistent with the title of another, and the city having thereafter permitted such use and occupancy by the plaintiff for such great length of time, we conclude from these facts that the city is now
It is true that the-building constructed by plaintiff did not cover the whole of the strip, or a considerable part thereof, but payment for the lot in reliance on the representation that the strip ivas a part thereof was in principle equivalent to placing a valuable improvement on the whole of the strip, and brings the case within the principle of City of Cincinnati v. Evans, 5 Ohio St., 594, as interpreted by later Supreme Court decisions. Lane v. Kennedy, 13 Ohio St., 42; McClelland v. Miller, 28 Ohio St., 488, and Heddleston v. Hendricks, 52 Ohio St., 460.
In Ohio, as in most states, the statute of limitations, as such, does not run against municipalities as to their title and rights in streets which they hold in trust for the public; such rights are not extinguished by mere non-use or adverse possession due to laches, negligence or non-action of municipal authorities, but Ohio, in common with many other states, recognizes the doctrine that there are exceptional cases where there has been such conduct on the part of the public authorities, relied and acted upon by an adjacent owner, as will estop the public from retaking possession of a portion of a street occupied by such adjacent owner. That is, the circumstances may be such that the private rights of individuals are of more persuasive force in a particular case than the rights of the public, and in such a case it is found to be more just to enforce an equitable estoppel against the municipality rather than permit it to retake possession of such street. We regárd this doctrine as applicable to the case at bar, the plaintiff here having
Finding that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief asked for a decree may be drawn accordingly.
Decree accordingly.