Madison County IL Archives Court.....Godfrey, Vs Alton 1881 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/il/ilfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Deb Haines ddhaines@gmail.com April 19, 2006, 3:57 pm Source: Il Supreme Court Cases 1850-1851 Written: 1881 Benjamin Godfrey, plaintiff in error, v. The City of Alton, defendant in error. Error to Madison. If the owners of land agree upon a place, and make a survey, and lay off ground for public use, as a street or landing, and make sales in reference thereto, it amounts to a dedication of such ground to the public. A map is not essential to the validity of the dedication. *The statute of frauds does not apply to the dedication of ground to the public. (a) A dedication may be made by grant, or written instrument; it may be evidenced by acts and declarations without writing, no particular form being required to establish its validity, it being purely a question of intention. (b) A dedication may be made by survey and plat alone, without any declaration, either oral or on the plat, when it is evident from the face of the plat that it was intended to set apart certain grounds for the use of the public. (c) A dedication must be understood and construed, with reference to the objects and purposes for which it was made. All accessions to a public landing must necessarily attach to and form a part of it. (d) When an easement is granted to the public upon the margin of a navigable stream, the right to use and treat it as a landing is undoubted. ---------------------------- (a) The mode of making dedications is immaterial; and they are good by parol; Warren v. President, etc., of Jacksonville, 15 Ill., 236. (b) Dedication is a mere matter of intention, but evidence of the intention must be clear: Marcy v. Taylor, 19 Ill., 632; Kelly v. City of Chicago, 48 Ill., 388; McIntyre v. Story, 80 Ill., 127. Dedications can be established in any conceivable way by which the intention of the dedication can be evinced: Waugh v. Leech, 28 Ill., 488; Rees v. City of Chicago, 38 Ill., 322 (annotated edition), and note. (c) Making and recording a plat, not in conformity with the statute, is simply evidence of a dedication: Trustees, etc., v. Walsh, 57 Ill., 363. (d) See Livingston v. St. Clair County, 64 Ill., 56. ---------------------------- If the banks of a navigable river are dedicated, the dedicator has no interest in the bed of the stream which he can reserve, to the prejudice of the public easement over it. After verdict found upon several pleas, one may be withdrawn, the defendant being entitled to a judgment, if the verdict can be sustained on any one of the pleas. An erroneous verdict as to one plea does not vitiate the finding upon the others. This was an action, trespass quare clausum freget, brought by Godfrey against the City of Alton. The declaration alleges that defendant broke and entered the close of plaintiff, described as follows: "A certain lot of land lying within the corporate limits of the city of Alton, and situated within Godfrey’s and Gilman’s addition to the town, now city of Alton; being in front of block number ninety-two, and separated therefrom by a forty foot street, and bounded on the north by said forty-foot street; on the south by the Mississippi river; on the east by the lot known as the Ferry lot, at the foot of State street; and on the west by the land known as the Penitentiary Tract, in said city of Alton." Damages, three thousand dollars. First plea—Not guilty. Second plea—That the close was a public highway. Third plea—Liberum tenementum. Fourth plea—Dedication of said close, by Winthrop S. Gilman, to the public street. Fifth plea—Dedication of said close by Winthrop S. Gilman and Benjamin Godfrey. Issues to the country upon all the pleas. Upon the trial the defendant admitted the commission of the acts, upon the premises, as set forth in the declaration; and it was proven that the damages were at least twenty-five dollars. The plaintiff proved title to the fractional quarter section extending to the river, upon which the locus in quo is situated. Abraham Breath, witness for plaintiff, testified that Godfrey & *Gilman occupied from 1832 to 1841 the warehouses situated upon lots 1 and 2, in block 92, and in front of the locus in quo; used the land in front of said block—it being the locus in quo — for receiving and shipping goods from and on board steamboats, in common with others. That for the last two years past, Captain Lamothe had wood upon the locus in quo, in several places; that he occupied the same by consent of the plaintiff. Pork-packers used the same for shipping; Lamothe had his wood on the premises for nearly two years; the pork-packers had their barrels thereon from four to six weeks at a time; that Lamothe held the premises under the plaintiff; that the premises Were used as a public landing, and by all persons; that the space between block 92 and the river has been covered over with stone hauled by the state of Illinois. The defendant produced George Smith as a witness, who testified that he had known the property in dispute for the last thirty years. That in 1832, most, if not all the land in dispute, was in the Mississippi River. There was then between forty and fifty feet of land between the warehouse on block 92 and the river, at low stage of water; at high stages of water it might have come to the warehouse. That in 1831, and since the witness had known the locus in quo, it had been used by the public as a steamboat landing, passage for drays, and other purposes, without interruption, until plaintiff commenced building. Buildings were commenced upon other lots in block 92, in 1835 and 1836. That the occupation by the plaintiff, of the premises in question, by a building, would diminish the value of the opposite property in block 92. The landing in front of block 92 has been extended outwards towards the river, by natural and artificial means, by the state and city. At the date of the survey testified to by Spaulding, the title was shown to have been in Godfrey & Gilman, who had sold portions of block 92. Lewis J. Clawson testified that he had known the property in dispute since 1831; that it has continued to be a public highway. In the year 1831 the space between block 92 and the river was from thirty to forty feet. The first building on the west end of the block Was erected in 1831; a building adjoining was put up in 1833, and a third in 1835; all the other buildings upon the block were erected in 1835 and 1836. That at this time eight *lots of the twelve composing the block, are built upon. The levee in front of block 92 has been filled out into the river forty or fifty feet, and raised eight or nine feet; part of which was done by the state of Illinois and part by the city of Alton; that it is covered with stones—a kind of rough macadamizing; that it has been used for a street and landing. In 1832 all the ground in front of block 92 was not over thirty-five feet wide; it is now sixty or eighty feet wide—about forty feet has been filled out. Godfrey & Gilman occupied a building on block 92, from 1831 to 1841; they were forwarding, commission, and selling merchants. They filled out a part of this landing in front of their store, for a steamboat landing; they threw out the spawls from their buildings in 1833, and that was the most convenient place to put them; and they used the same until they quit business, in 1841, and so did others. Samuel Avis testified that he had been acquainted with the locus in quo for nineteen years, and during all that time it has been occupied as public property, for road and hauling; block 92, near the river, when witness first knew it, except near the west end, a rock run out into deep water; this rock is now under the landing. In the year 1837, a line forty feet south of block 92, and running parallel thereto, would have been in the river. In the year 1837, the buildings were thirty feet from the river; they are now seventy feet therefrom; in 1832 they were twenty, perhaps thirty, feet distant. Godfrey & Gilman filled out a part of this land when building; they were merchants from 1832 until 1841, when they quit business; they used the landing in common with others; other persons building between Godfrey & Gilman, filled in, in front of their lots; a sixty-six foot road would in 1837 have taken twenty or thirty feet from the buildings. William Hayden testified that he had known the premises in dispute eighteen years, occupied and used by every body as a public landing. When Lamothe was ordered off by the defendant, he asked permission of the city to continue his wood thereon. In the years 1836 and 1837, a line forty feet south of block 92, would have been in the river; and at an ordinary stage of water boats would have landed in the forty foot street. Godfrey & Gilman built a bulk-head of stone on a part of the premises. The tax books of the county of Madison, for the years 1844, *1845, 1846, 1847 and 1848, were produced in evidence, to show that said land had not been listed by plaintiff when called upon, as above, for a list of his property. D. A. Spaulding testified that he had been acquainted with the premises for thirty years. In 1832, Alton was extended and laid off by witness, at request of the owners, Russell, Gilman, Godfrey, and Hayden. Russell came after witness, and he and the others in interest, agreed on the plan, and witness made the survey. Front street was located as far up as the penitentiary. The front line of Godfrey & Gilman’s warehouse, was to be on the north line of Front street; and we measured out to see how far it was to low water. Front street was to extend into the river. It was laid out for a public highway and landing. The matter Was talked over. It was anticipated and understood, that Front street was to be extended out into the river. Gilman made the block 92 as near to the river as he could. Witness thought he was very anxious to crowd out into the river, and make the purchasers of lots fill up. Opposite to block 92, and between that block and the river, the ground has been used as a public landing ever since I have known it. The space between the north line of Front street and the river Was in some places twenty, and in some thirty feet. It Would not average more than twenty-five feet. A street along there sixty-six feet wide from the river, in 1833, would extend some forty feet into the lots, as they now exist. In the fall of 1832, the county road on this ground, a little time after this survey, was to run where the points were fixed, on the corner of lot 1, in block 92, and extend fifty feet to the river. Joseph Burnap testified that he made the plat of Godfrey and Gilman’s additions to the town of Alton, in the fall of 1836, embracing block 92, and at the time he made the survey, most of the buildings now on block 92 were erected. (See plat of block 92.) L. J. Clawson testified that the city put rock on premises, but he did not know who paid for it. Verdict for the defendant upon the first, second, third, fourth and fifth pleas. Thereupon defendant waived a verdict upon the third plea of liberum tenementum, and leave was given to the defendant by the court to withdraw said plea. Plaintiff moved the court for a new trial. The cause was heard before Underwood, Judge, and a jury, *at August term, 1850, when a judgment was rendered for the defendant. Godfrey brings the case to this court by writ of error. Billings & Parsons and William Martin, for plaintiff in error: 1. The court had no power to order a waiver of the verdict on the issue of liberum tenementum: 10 Bacon's Abridgment, title Verdict, 362; 1 H. Blackstone, 79; 10 N. Hampshire, 304; 19 Wend., 628. 2. The possession or enjoyment on which a prescriptive title is founded, must be open, peaceable, continued, and unequivocal; it must also be adverse, of a nature to indicate that it was claimed as a right, and not from indulgence, or of any compact short of a grant: 2 Greenleaf's Cruise, 222, and note 1; 14 Mass., 49; 2 McCord. 445; 5 Cond. Rep., 243, and note; 10 Mass. 151, 407; 4 Pick., 222; 9 Pick., 251; 5 Pick., 131; 11 Pick., 217; Angel on Limitations, 442. 3. A dedication in specific terms, on the recorded plat of a town, is not to be affected by parol proof of the intention of the donors: Brown v. Manning, 6 Ohio, 129; Cincinnati v. White, 6 Peters, 441; Dummer v. The Board of Selectmen, etc., 1 Spencer, 86; 8 B. Munroe, 252. It is contended in this case that the evidence was not sufficient to show that Godfrey & Gilman intended to dedicate the land in controversy to the public. There are two modes of establishing by evidence to the fact of dedication; one by length of public use, the other, by some unequivocal act—showing that the owner intended to appropriate the land to public use: 6 Peters, 504; 5 Taunton, 127; 7 Com. Law Rep., 158; 11 Metcalf, 241; 24 Pick., 71. 80; 3 Metcalf, 239. Where the width of a street, marked by right lines, is given in a town plat, surplus land between the street and the low water mark of a river, is not thereby dedicated to the use of the town: McLaughlin v. Stevens, 18 Ohio, 94; Barclay et al. v. Howell's Lessee, 6 Peters, 498; Conner v. The President and Trustees of New Albany, 1 Blackf., 43. D. J. Baker, J. Gillespie, and E. Keating, for defendant in error: The verdict was regular, and the court properly allowed the defendant to waive the verdict on the plea of liberum tenementum: 10 Bacon’s Ab., 328, 349, 330; Sutton v. Dana, 1 Metcalf, 382; French v. Hanchett, 12 Pick., 15; 19 Pick., 25; Jones v. Kennedy, 11 Pick., 125. Caton, J. - We shall rest our decision upon the single claim of dedication, arising from the survey made by Spaulding, without investigating the various other claims insisted upon in behalf of the city. Spaulding swears that, in 1832, Alton was extended and laid off by him at the request of the several owners, who agreed upon the plan, and that he made the survey. He surveyed block 92, and Front street. He says, "Front street was to extend into the river. It was laid out as a public highway and landing. The matter was talked over." Front street extended from block 92 down to and into the river. No pretense seems to have been made at that time, nor until several years after, of any intention by Godfrey & Gilman to reserve to themselves anythng south of Front street. They went on and made sales in block ninety- two, in reference to, and recognizing that street, and improvements were also made upon that block. This clearly amounted to a dedication of the space, thus made common for a street and public landing, according to the plan agreed upon among the proprietors, and the survey of Spaulding. The street and landing were laid off, and the owners of the soil proclaimed the purposes to which it should be devoted. All the other proprietors of the town, with whom the plan was agreed upon, as well as those who purchased with reference to that plan and survey, paid a consideration for the dedication, and had a direct interest in insisting upon its perpetuity. It is true that it does not appear that any map was made of this survey, but that was not essential to the validity of the dedication. The statute of frauds does not apply to the dedication of ground to the public. Such a dedication may be made by grant, or other written instrument, or it may be evidenced by acts and declaration, without writing. No particular form is required to the validity of a dedication. It is purely a question of intention. A dedication may be made by a survey and plat alone, without any declaration, either oral or on the plat, when it is evident from the face of the plat that it was the intention of the proprietor to set apart certain *grounds for the use of the public. An examination of the cases referred to on the argument will show that dedications have been established in every conceivable way, by which the intention of the dedicator could be evinced. And great importance is frequently attached to the fact that investments or improvements have been made, either by individuals or the public, in reference to a dedication, and with the knowledge of the proprietor. A dedication must be understood and construed with reference to the objects and purposes for which it was made. This is peculiarly the case with a public landing upon a navigable water course. That is necessarily inseparable from the margin of the water, however that may fluctuate. Without this, its enjoyment would be precarious, and often destroyed. All accretions to a public landing must necessarily attach to and form a part Of it, otherwise we should have the novel spectacle of a public landing separated from the water, as is in fact attempted in this case. Such a proposition does not require refutation. The only question that arises here is, was it the intention of the owners of the land, and their agreement with the other proprietors. But in the absence of any such expression, I should be equally clear, from the manner in which the ground was laid off, that it was for a public landing, as well as for a street. On the north side it was bounded by block 92, and on the south by the river, varying in width according to the meanderings of the stream. This stream was a public highway, in contact with this, another easement is granted, and the very location of it shows that it was designed for the purpose of lading and unlading freight and landing passengers from the water communication, as much as the laying out of an interior street would show that it was designed for the use of travelers by land. The street and landing thus laid off, was subsequently—as it had been previously—used and enjoyed by the public, and was improved and extended into the river, both by natural accretions and by artificial means, and no pretense of any claim appears to have been set up on the part of any one, adverse to the full enjoyment of the public landing, until 1836, when the addition of Godfrey & Gilman to the town of Alton was platted by Burnap. By the marks upon this plat, we see for the first time a *claim set up to a portion of the bed of the stream, in front of this landing. The landing has since been filled up and extended into the river, so that it now covers the place designated on that plat as claimed by the proprietors of that addition. For this claim we can see no pretense whatever. As we have already seen, long previous to this time, the entire space between block 92 and the river had been dedicated for a street and for a public landing, and to separate such a dedication from the river would destroy it. But even if there had not been any previous dedication, we think the same construction should be given to the plat made in 1836. At that time Front street, as laid out on that plat, covered the margin of the river and extended twenty or thirty feet into the stream, and it was beyond this, that a claim was indicated of the premises in question. When an easement is granted to the public upon the margin of a navigable stream, the right to use and treat it as a landing is undoubted. Having dedicated the banks of the river, this united the two easements, each of which was essential to the full enjoyment of the other; they had no interests in the bed of the stream which they could reserve, to the prejudice of the enjoyment of the public easement over it. Exceptions were taken to the instructions. These are very numerous, and some of them very long, and not very perspicuous, and may not have tended much to the enlightenment of the jury. It would be tedious and unprofitable to review them separately. Although some verbal alteration might well have made to one or two of them, still on the whole we think the law was not improperly laid down to the jury. A verdict was returned for the defendant upon all the pleas, after which the plea of liberum tenementum was allowed to be withdrawn, and this is assigned for error. In this there was nothing improper, nor was there anything prejudicial to the rights of the plaintiff. That plea may not have been sustained by the evidence, yet the defendant was entitled to a judgment, if the verdict upon any of the pleas could be sustained. Because the verdict upon one plea was erroneous, it would not vitiate the finding upon the others. The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed, with costs. Judgment affirmed. Additional Comments: Source: Reports of Cases Determined in the Supreme Court of the State of Illinois from November Term, 1850, to June Term, 1851, both inclusive, by E. Peck, Counsellor at Law; Volume XII; Reprinted from the Original Edition, with Annotations by William Gordon McMillan of the Chicago Bar; Callaghan & Company, Chicago, Ill. 1881 File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/il/madison/court/godfrey11nwl.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.net/ilfiles/ File size: 21.3 Kb