Cities and towns may acquire the title to streets and alleys by conveyance, by dedication, by prescription, or by the surveying and platting k>f a town or city, if acknowledged and recorded in the mode prescribed by the statute. The plat in question, and under which the city claims the street in controversy, was made and recorded in 1840, and is governed by the act of 1833, prescribing the mode of making and recording town plats. The first section, R. L., p. 599, provides, that any person wishing to lay out a town, or an addition, or sub-division of out lots, shall cause the same to be surveyed, and a plat or map thereof made by the county surveyor, which shall particularly describe all streets, alleys, commons or public grounds, and all in and out lots, etc., giving the names, widths, corners, boundaries, and extent of all such streets and alleys. By the second section, it is required that all in lots intended for sale, shall be numbered in progressive numbers, or by squares in which they are situated, and their precise length and width shall be stated on the plat or map; and out lots, which do not exceed ten acres, are likewise required to be surveyed and numbered, and their exact length and width stated on the map or plat, together with any streets, alleys, or roads which may divide or border on the same.
The third section requires the proprietor, at the time of the survey, to set a stone at the corner of the public ground, if any, or if there be none, then at the corner of some lot, from which to make future surveys; the point at which it is placed is required to be designated on the plat. The fourth section requires the plat, after its completion, to be certified by the surveyor and proprietor, and before the recording the same, to acknowledge it before one of the officers named in the section, which acknowledgment is required to be certified on the plat, and the certificates, with the plat, are required to be recorded. The fifth section provides that the plat, when made out, certified, acknowledged, and recorded, as required by the act, shall vest the title in the land intended for streets, alleys, ways, commons, or other public uses, in such town or city, or addition thereto, and for the uses and purposes set forth and expressed or intended.
It will be perceived in this case, that the ground claimed as a street, is not named on the plat as such, nor is its length, width, boundaries and corner given, as the statute requires. The certificate accompanying the plat, also fails to refer to, or in any wise to designate it as such. From the plat and certificate it cannot be known whether it was designed for a street or lot, or, in fact, whether for either. In this respect, there is a failure to conform to the requirements of the statute, and as the plat and certificate, under the statute, takes the place of a deed of conveyance, its provisions should have been, at least, so far observed as to describe it with such a degree of certainty, that it might be determined for what purpose it was intended. Even if we could infer from the plat and certificate that it was designed for a street, this map affords no means of ascertaining its length or width. If it were conceded that the observance of every requirement of the statute was not essential to the validity of the plat, still enough must appear to enable a location, by metes and bounds of the streets, alleys, ways and roads, and to distinguish them from lots, before the title can vest in the city by operation of the plat. The plat has, by the statute, the force and effect of a deed to pass the title to the streets, alleys, etc., and to have that effect, it should describe them with such certainty, by measurement and description, that they may be located. This plat and certificate is insufficient, under the statute, to pass the title to the land in dispute, to the city.
It then becomes simply a question of intention, whether there was a design to dedicate this property to the city for the purpose of a street. This question of intention must be determined by all the circumstances which surrounded the transaction. It is alleged in the bill that this piece of ground had been sold by Coleman with the supposed adjoining lots, in a body, and not by the lines on the map. . That he and his assigns, including z complainant, had been assessed by the city, and paid taxes on the ground in controversy ever since the plat was recorded. That it had never been opened, traveled or repaired as a street, at any time. That no lots had ever been sold adjoining it, by which it became necessary to be used by the purchasers or others for that purpose. That the lines on the map or plat were only intended to indicate the manner in which it might be sub-divided at some future time. The allegations are admitted by the demurrer to be true, and from them it becomes necessary to determine whether an intention to dedicate this property by the owner, or an acceptance on the part of the city, is manifested. These acts on the part of the owner and city, instead of indicating, repel the presumption of such an.intent. If the city considered it a public street, why tax it, and compel the persons claiming it, to pay such taxes in the same manner as they did upon their other property ? Or why permit it to remain inclosed for such a length of time, without the assertion of any right or claim to it ?
Again, the allegations which stand admitted as true, do not warrant the presumption that Coleman regarded the property as having been dedicated, but they, on the contrary, repel any such presumption. If he had supposed that he had 'dedicated the property, why sell and convey it as his own ? Or if his' grantee had supposed that it had been dedicated, why would he become the purchaser of it ? And why pay taxes upon it as his own if he knew or supposed it belonged to the city ? While the statute of limitations can not bar the public, still, long continued possession, adverse to the claim of the public, may be shown to repel the presumption of a dedication, sought to be established by equivocal or doubtful acts of the owner, and the greater the length of possession, where the public have never been in the enjoyment of the property, the stronger will be the presumption against the intention to dedicate.
In this case the occupancy by the defendant in error, and those under whom he claims, had been nearly double the length of time required to create a bar under the statute of limitations, had the claim been asserted against him by an individual, and during that period, there seems to have been no claim or assertion of right by the city, but, on the contrary, it seems to have recognized the individual claims by collecting taxes on this property. This, we think, when taken with the other facts in the case, raises a strong presumption that this property was never dedicated, and accepted by the city, both of which is essential to such a claim.
Again, the bill alleges, and the demurrer admits that it was not the intention of the proprietor to divide the ground at the time of the recording of the plat, but that there was an intention to do so at some future time. This averment seems to be supported by the plat which was made and recorded. Until he carried that intention into effect by selling lots on this tract by the lines indicated on the plat, we cannot infer an intention to dedicate. Had he made such sales, then he would doubtless have indicated such an intention, but until that time, he had a right to change his mind, and sell the whole of the ground as one tract. This right he has exercised, and by doing so, the city never became the owners of the property by dedication, wherefore the decree of the court below must be aErmed.
Decree affirmed.