City of Des Moines v. Hall

Lowe, Ch. J.

1. corporation MUNICIPAL : dedication; alleys. The laying off, platting and recording of town sites, and all subsequent additions thereto, are matters of statutory regulations. When _ . ° done, it impresses the property with a new character, dedicates it to new objects, subjects it to new burdens, and is known by a new description; it becomes, in other words, town 'or city property, in contradistinction to country property; it must, therefore, have the attributes and conditions which the law itself fixes upon it. The statement which in this case the proprietors make on the plat, that they conveyed the streets and alleys of their addition to the county of Polk, for the use of the public, can have no legal significance or effect. It is the plat, acknowledged and recorded, that conveys title under section 637 of the Code. So, in this case, it was *237the survey, plat, acknowledgment, and recording of their addition, which determined, by operation of the statute, where the title of the streets vested, and a contrary statement on the plat, so unusual and out of place, and without any apparent reason to support it, cannot have the effect to change or repeal the regulations of the statute on the subject.

be pi%oE The acceptance of this addition, by the city, aft| lapse of ten years, may well be presumed, no ligia of which is the act of bringing this suit. j'

But the chief point in controversy in this case/^e|I^5 the question, whether the laying off and recc&ding^ a town plat, or an addition thereto, has the the statute, to vest the absolute title of the streets corporate public; if so, the demurrer was well plead, otherwise it should have been overruled.

Hall’s addition to the city of Des Moines was made under the provisions of the Code of 1851.

Section 637 reads as follows: The acknowledgment and recording of such plat is equivalent to a deed in fee simple of such portion of the land as is therein set apart for public use, or is dedicated to charitable, religious or educational purposes.”

Under this section, we suppose the public would get the same grade of title to the streets that charitable, religious or educational institutions would get to lots or grounds set apart to them. They stand precisely in the same category. It would be as unreasonable, as it is against the plainest meaning of the language in this section, to allow the juoprietor of a town site, after recording a plat of the same, to go upon ground dedicated to charitable and religious purposes, and strip it of its timber, or of its coal, if perchance any should be found under the surface thereof. No dedication of ground for such purposes has ever been understood to be coupled. *238with sucb annoyances from the dedicator. To claim it, is a perversion of the true meaning and intent of the law.

And there is just as little reason to subject the dedication of streets to like interferences from the original proprietor. If permitted, no one could tell how far it might subsequently affect the free and safe use of the street as a highway, or interfere with the grading, the construction of underground sewers, and other improvements. And we are inclined to believe that it was the object of the legislature, in withholding the title of the streets from the lot owner, divesting the proprietor thereof, and placing it in the public, to give to the corporate authorities the fullest power and control over the same, which can arise from title, in order that all improvements of them as highways might be made without let or hindrance from any quarter. At all events, it is always the better and safer course to interpret a statute according to the natural import of the language used.

Applying this rule of construction to the section of the Code to which reference has already been made, we cannot be at a loss to determine its meaning, and to hold that it does, for the designated purposes, vest the absolute title in the public. As such, the defendant has no more right to mine and take out coal from one or more of the streets of her addition than any stranger, and the law will hold her equally amenable for the trespass.

And this conclusion is not without support from several decisions which we have heretofore made directly and indirectly, and is also sustained by authority from other States upon a similar statute. Milburn v. City of Cedar Rapids, 12 Iowa, 246; McMahon v. Council Bluffs, id. 268; Hughes v. M. & M. R. R. Co., id. 261; Canal Trustees v. Havens et al., 11 Ill. 554.

Cole, J., dissenting.

*239Dillon, Ch. J. — The foregoing opinion was filed, in this case at the December Term, 1866, by the then chief justice.

Subsequently a petition for rehearing was presented and granted. Accordingly, the cause has been reargued. As the defendant’s counsel claims that the former opinion does not notice or sufficiently answer all of the points presented by him, this will now be done so far as it is deemed to be necessary.

The action is brought by the city in its corporate capacity to recover damages for coal mined and taken by the defendant from beneath the surface of certain streets in Hall’s addition to the town of Fort Des Moines, now the city of Des Moines.

The city claims, that, under the statute, it has the fee simple title to these streets, and that, having such a title, it may of right maintain this action against the original dedicator, or any other person who, without its authority, mines and takes coal therefrom.

The defendant denies, that, in fact, there was any statutory dedication of the streets in said addition.

If this point is ruled against her, she then claims, that, i/n law, such a'dedication do.es not give the city the right to the coal within the limits, but beneath the surface of the streets. In other words, she claims, that, notwithstanding such a dedication of the streets, the right to the coal or minerals therein or thereunder remains with the original donor or proprietor.

¥e first inquire whether the streets in Hall’s addition were dedicated to the town, now city of Des Moines.

In 1856, Hall owned the land on which the addition was laid out. The land was (as alleged in the answer) withm the corporate limits of the town of Fort Des Moines, but constituted no part of the original town plat. In the year last named (1856), Hall caused the land to *240be surveyed and platted into blocks, subdivided into lots, with streets and alleys in the usual manner.

On the map or plat was written the following “ For the consideration of the advancement of the price of real estate laid out into town lots, we, Edwin Hall and Sytha Jane Hall, the proprietors of the within described town plat, do hereby convey to Pollc county, for the use of the public, the streets and alleys as marked on the within plat, and dedicate the same to the public.”

Edwin Hall,
“Sytha J. Hall.
“ February 18, 1856.”

This map or plat was made under or in pursuance of sections 632, 633 and 634 of the Code of 1851, then in force.

On the plat was an acknowledgment exactly in conformity with section 635 of the Code, viz.: “ that the disposition of the lands as shown by the within plat and map, is with their free consent, and in accordance with their desire.” No reference is made in the acknowledgment, to the instrument conveying the streets and alleys to Polk county.

The plat and acknowledgment were presented to the county judge as required by section 636, and he, as therein directed, entered an order that the same be recorded, which was done.

It was from the streets in this plat that the coal was taken for which this action ás brought.

The next section (637) provides, that “ The acknowledgment and recording of such plat is equivalent to a deed vafee simple of such portion of the land as is therein set apart for public use, or is dedicated to charitable, religious or educational purposes.” If it were not for what is termed by counsel, the deed to Polk county, indorsed on *241the plat, it is clear that- here would, under the statute, be a complete dedication of the streets.

But defendant claims that it is this deed and not the plat, though the-latter be acknowledged and recorded, that conveys the title, and that the title thus conveyed is to Polk county, and not to the town or city corporation. Therefore the right of action for the coal, if in either county or city, is in the former, and the plaintiff, the city, cannot recover.

The answer to this argument is, that, aside from the attempted conveyance to the county, the laying off, platting, acknowledgment and recording were in exact conformity with the statute, making a complete statutory dedication of the streets. This dedication would give the streets or the control thereof to the town or city corporation, and not to the county.

The rights thus given by this dedication are not taken away by the attempted conveyance (so called) to the county, because such conveyance was simply inoperative. It was inoperative, because a proprietor, laying off an addition to an incorporated town or city, cannot confer upon some other public corporation rights in and control over the streets and alleys, and such other corporation has no authority to accept a grant, foreign to its powers and duties. To recognize such a doctrine, would be to deprive the city or town of the usual and necessary control of its own streets, and to give this control to a foreign or extraneous corporation. These principles are well sustained by adjudged, cases. Jackson v. Hartwell, 8 Johns. 422; id. 385; Trustees, etc., v. Peaslee, 15 N. H. 317; Morris v. Bowers, Wright (Ohio), 157; Sloan v. McConahay, 4 Ohio, 157; Hornbeck v. Westbrook, 9 Johns. 73; North Hempstead v. Hempstead, 2 Wend. 109; Coggeshall v. Pelton, 7 Johns. Ch. 292.

This view is not in conflict with the right of a proprie*242tor in laying out a town or city or addition thereto, to grant simply the use of, or an easement in, the streets, or to reserve minerals therein, as was held in The City of Dubuque v. Benson (23 Iowa, 248).

2. — accogt«on. It is next contended by the defendant, that there was no statutory dedication, of Hall’s addition, because the same was never accepted by the town or city, The acceptance of the addition, it is said, is as necessary to vest the fee in the city, as the making and, recording of the plat (Code 1851, §§ 638, 642).

The former opinion disposes of this point, by the remark, that “ an acceptance, after the lapse of ten years, may well be presumed, no light proof of which is the act of bringing this suit.”

But, without resting upon this ground, or this alone, we may observe, that, at the time Hall’s addition was laid out, Fort Des Moines was acting under a special charter. This charter did not in terms require the assent of the town authorities to the plat or addition.

Afterward, by act of January 28, 1857 (Laws 1857, ch. 185, p. 281), the charter of the city of Des Moines was amended, and included this addition, with others, in the corporate limits. If not before a part of the city, it became such by virtue of this act, and the fee in the streets, and the control of the streets, passed to the city by operation of law. Could the county after this claim any right in or control over the streets of this addition ? Surely not.

Could the city, after accepting this amended charter, be heard to say, that it was under no obligation or had no power to work or keep in repair the streets of an addition included within and made part of it? Clearly not.

If these views are correct, it follows, that there was a complete statutory, dedication, of the streets in Hall’s *243addition, and that the city of Des Moines holds the fee simple thereto, as provided by section 637, above quoted.

What we hold is, that accepting a charter, which included this addition in its limits, is an acceptance of the addition and the streets therein.

For the general doctrine as to the necessity of an acceptance by the local authorities, for what purpose such acceptance is necessary, and how it may be proved, see State v. Wilson, 42 Maine, 9; State v. Bradbury, 40 id. 154; City of Oswego v. Canal Co., 2 Seld. 257; Remington v. Millerd, 1 R. I. 93; State v. Carver, 5 Strobh. 217; Commonwealth v. Kelley, 8 Gratt. (Va.) 632; Bowman v. Boston, 5 Cush. (Mass.) 1; Hyden v. Jamaica, 27 Vt. 443; Hobbs v. Lowell, 19 Pick. 405; Commonwealth v. Belding, 13 Metc. 10; Hemphill v. Boston, 8 Cush. 195; Jennings v. Tisbury, 5 Gray, 73; 7 id. 338; State v. New Boston, 11 N. H. 414; People v. Jones, 6 Mich. 176, 184; Willoughby v. Jenks, 20 Wend. 96; Curtis v. Hoyt, 19 Conn. 154.

3._effect of dedication. It being thus settled that there is a perfect statutory dedication, the next question is, whether the right to subterraneous deposits of coal within the limits ^g gfo.ggtg js jn £he cpy or ^he original proprietor, it not appearing that such proprietor has aliened the adjacent lots? At common law, it will be conceded that the right to such coal would not be in the city; that the owner of the adjacent lot would own the soil to the middle of the street, subject to the easement of passage and the like in favor of the public. This was so held in Dubuque v. Maloney (9 Iowa, 450). Accordingly, in that case, it was decided that the city could not construct a cistern in the street without the consent of the adjoining lot owner.

But, where a town or an addition is laid out under the statute, it is different, as was held by this court in Mil*244burn v. Cedar Rapids, etc. (12 Iowa, 246, 252), and Huyhes v. R. R. Co. (id. 261). It is there remarked, that “It is not true, then, that a purchaser of town property in this State takes a title in the fee of the same to the center of the street upon which it fronts; but the only interest which he possesses in or to the streets is that which is common to the whole public, the right of way over them.” To which should, perhaps, be added the right of reverter in case the street should be vacated. And the donor or dedicator, if he retains the lots, has no greater rights in the, streets than his grantee of the lots would have. Accordingly, under a statutory dedication, it would seem clear that the city could construct a cistern or sewer in the street without the consent of the adjoining lot owner.

It is claimed by the defendant that only the surface of the streets is set apart for the public. This we do not believe to be a true view of the statute. Cannot the city excavate and remove the surface ? Who doubts it ? If it meets, in so doing, with a valuable quarry of stone or gravel, may it'not use or sell the stone or gravel ? Why not? Can the adjacent owner claim the subterraneous stone or gravel and sand, on the ground that it does not interfere with the present use of the street ? If he cannot, has he any better right to the coal ? If the coal is his, may he, if he has never parted with his right to it, not claim it, and the right to mine it, though this should interfere with the work of actual municipal improvement ? If the coal is his, his property, how can the city deprive him of it ?

To recognize such a right in the adjoining owner, is to deprive the city of that full and ample control over the streets which it was the purpose of the statute to confer upon the municipal government.

It is argued that the city has no power to engage in *245mining operations, and that to hold that it, and not the adjacent lot holder, owns the coal, is to tie up valuable mines so that no one can get the benefit of them.

It is true, that, without express or plain authority, a city could not buy or lease lands to carry on the business of mining. It cannot engage in quarrying and selling stone as an independent business. But if it needs stone for public improvements, it may lease, or perhaps buy, land containing stone, and quarry them. Clearly it may take them from its own streets.

If it has a coal mine under its streets, why, if it can do so profitably, may it not raise the coal and sell it, or allow others to do so, receiving rent or other compensa tion? Ve see no good reason. It being understood, of course, that the right of public and safe passage upon the street is not to be thereby obstructed or impaired.

By way of illustration, we may inquire whether the city might not maintain an action against the defendant, or against any adjoining lot owner, if he should, without the consent of the city, take from the streets any earth, stone, sand or gravel? If this material were taken from the surface of the street, none could doubt that the city might sue and recover the value of the material thus taken, or the damage thereby done.

Is it different if the material be taken from beneath the present level or grade of the street ? It seems to us, not. Is a distinction to be taken between material of this character’, and coal? May the adjoining lot owner take the one as of right, and be held a wrong-doer if he takes the other? Upon what principle can such a distinction rest?

The true view is, that, when land has been dedicated under the statute, without reservation, and the plat has been recorded and accepted in cases where an acceptance is necessary, the dedicator or his grantee has no special proprietary rights in the soil composing the streets, but *246the dominion of the streets passes to the public authorities.

No other view gives effect to the strong language of the statute, that “the acknowledgment and recording of such a plat is equivalent to a deed in fee simple, of the portion of the land set apart for public use.” It is plain from this language, that such a dedicator parts with all of his special property rights in the streets, just as effectually as does an ordinary grantor, with perhaps the exception of a right of reverter to him or his assignee, in case the street should be vacated. In support of this view, see Trustees v. Haven, 11 Ill. 554; Hunter v. Middleton, 13 id. 50; Moses v. R. R. Co., 21 id. 516; Seventeenth street, 1 Wend. 262; Clinton v. R. R. Co., infra.

After such a dedication, he has no more right to interfere with the street than a stranger. If the city could maintain this action against a stranger, it can equally maintain it against the dedicator or his grantee.

And this view is clearly maintainable without holding, as the defendant supposes we must, that the city corporation may engage in the business of mining. But on this point, we need add nothing to what has been before said. Again, the defendant makes this argument: He asserts the undeniable proposition, that a city cannot alien or sell its public streets. He then says, if it cannot sell the whole street, it cannot sell part of it, that is the coal under it, and thus divert it from the purposes for which-dedicated.

It is undoubtedly true, that the primary idea of a street is, for the purpose of a way, a place upon which the public have a right to pass. This right the city may not destroy or unreasonably abridge. It could not take coal from the streets, or authorize others to do so, if this should interfere with the paramount and dominant right of the public to the use of the street as a highway. But, *247if, in subjection to this, the city can make a profitable use of the subjacent material of the street, why may it not do so ?

But it is enough in this case to hold, that, as against the adjoining lot owner or original dedicator, the city has full control over the whole street, and not simply over the surface, and that it can maintain an action against any person who, without its permission, removes any material from the body of the street, whether such material be superficial or subterraneous.

Allowing the city to use the coal in its streets, and prohibiting others fr.om doing thus against the city’s consent, is a very different tiling from allowing a city to sell or dispose of its streets, or property, or franchises which it holds in trust for the public.

At common law, the dedication of land for streets was of the use simply. The statute changes this, makes the dedication extend to soil, and the soil includes, of course, the minerals therein. It is an inaccurate and mistaken use of the term fee simple to limit it to a mere use. It is a correct and proper use of the word to express the idea of the right or title to the soil.

Affirmed.