{dissenting). The proofs in these two cases were taken by stipulation as in one case, and were argued together here. The bills of complaint were filed to quiet the title to a piece of land in the city of Grand Rapids which has been known as and called, by the public generally, the' “ Court-house Square” or “Public Square” in said city, and latterly by many as the “ Public Park.”
Owing to the destruction of the records of conveyances in the office of the register of deeds of Kent county by fire some 15 years ago, it has been somewhat difficult to show the whole record history of the land in controversy, but yet we are enabled to get a pretty clear statement, from the record before us, of its ownership and use, from the date of its first trans» fer by the government to the present time.
*157December 2, 1833, 80 acres of land, of which this parcel in question was a part, was patented by the United States to Samuel Dexter, of Ionia. While he claimed the title, and it was supposed he owned it, but before the patent was issued, in November, 1833, James Kingsley, S. V. R. Trowbridge, and Charles Lanman, commissioners appointed by the governor of the then territory of Michigan to locate the “seat of justice” for the county of Kent, came to the city of Grand Rapids, and located the same upon the lands of Samuel Dexter, as reported by them, and marked a hickory tree thereon as the center of the same, — the said piece of land to be 20 rods square; and from the proofs it appears that said piece of ground, so located and marked, covered substantially, as near as may be, this so-called “Court-house Square.”
Samuel Dexter recognized this “seat of justice” in his subsequent conveyance to Daniels and Sheldon, and this location may be said to have been the foundation of this land being dedicated and reserved for public use.
In April, 1835, Dexter and wife conveyed a portion of his land to Louis Campan, including the north half of this courthouse square. This is the parcel of land in controversy in the first-named case, which the city of Grand Rapids claims to own under a deed from said Louis Campan dated August 12, 1852, quitclaiming the said premises to said city, “to be and remain public grounds for the free and uninterrupted use of the inhabitants of said city, and for no other purpose.”
In August, 1835, said Dexter and wife deeded to Lyman I. Daniels and Thomas C. Sheldon another parcel of his lands, including the south half of said square, and bounded on the north by a line, due east and west, “passing at a tree marked by the commissioners to locate the seat of justice of Kent county as such location.”
This south half of the square is the land involved in the second case. The city of Grand Rapids claims it by ad verse possession for more than 20 years, for the purpose of main-' taining and preserving a public park thereon for the use and benefit of its citizens.
*158The defendant George E. Pantlind claims title by conveyances from the heirs of Daniels. The defendants Thomas P. Sheldon, Alexandrine W. Willis, and Posa O. Geiss are the heirs at law of Sheldon, and claim an interest as such heirs in the premises.
The square, as now situated, and embracing these two parcels of land, is bounded on the north by Park street; east, by East Park place; west, by West Park place; and south, by Eulton street.
The county of Kent claims the whole of the square by dedication of the same for court-house purposes by the proprietors of the land, and acceptance of the same upon the part of the said county.
It is very evident that the proprietors of this land, in platting it for village purposes, dedicated this land to the public for public uses, and there is but little, if any, doubt but the dedication was intended for county purposes; that is, for use for the building and maintaining of a court-house and other county buildings thereon.
Louis Campau, in platting his property, the plat being recorded in Kalamazoo county, June 6, 1835, and in Kent county in 1843, marked this north half upon the plat as “ public square ; ” and intended, in so doing, to offer it to the public for court-house purposes. This is shown clearly enough by his statements and subsequent acts.
Somebody also platted the lands owned by Daniels and Sheldon, which plat was known as Bostwiek & Co.’s addition to Grand Kapids. This plat was made about the year 1838, and had the south half of this square marked upon it and reserved as “ court-house square.” This plat was made by one E. B. Bostwiek, who, it is claimed by the complainant, was acting as the agent of Sheldon, Daniels, and one Tileston, who had purchased a one-fourth interest in their property. It is not very certain from the proofs, such a length of time having -elapsed and affecting the memory of the witnesses, just in what capacity Bostwiek was acting when he made this plat; but one thing is certain, that nearly all the conveyances *159of land in that vicinity, and covered by the plat, were thereafter made in accordance and with reference to said plat.
It is very plain to me that this plat was authorized by the proprietors of the land, and that by said plat they intended to and did offer the land so marked to the public for use as a court-house square ; and for nearly fifty years, while Grand Kapids has been growing in population from a village of a few hundred people to a.city of 50,000 or more inhabitants, and while this piece of land has been growing, year after year, more and more valuable, it has nevertheless always laid out open to the public, and been unmolested in its public use by any private person or persons, except a feeble attempt on the part of Louis Campan to retake possession of the north half, which will be mentioned hereafter.
It was certainly dedicated as solemnly as possible to the public for some public use, and it has been accepted and used by the public.continuously ever since, without the interference of any private rights or claims to impair or impede such use.
This alone, in my opinion, disposes of all claim of title to this square, or any part thereof, by any private individual or individuals. It is either the property of the county or of the city for public purposes.
Another and most convincing fact showing that the whole of this square was dedicated to the public for court-house purposes is the building of a court-house upon the same in 1838, and its maintenance there until 1844, when it burned. The proofs show that this building was located as near the center of this square as possible, and occupied a portion of both halves of the same. Courts were held there, and the sheriff resided in the building. Campau was then a resident of the city, and he and the other proprietors knew of such occupancy, and never demurred or protested against it.
When this building burned, a temporary structure was erected in its stead, and occupied by the county for the holding of courts until some time in 1851 or 1852. During this period of fourteen years the possession and occupancy of the county were undisturbed by any other person or persons. *160Here, then, was a substantial dedication of the premises to the county of Kent for court-house purposes, and an active and sufficient acceptance of the same. If the county has not lost the right to hold these premises for such purposes, it needs no reference to authorities to sustain its present claim.
It is argued by the counsel for the city that in 1852 the county, through its supervisors, formally abandoned the whole of the square; gave up, in fact, its possession and control of the same; sold the court-house building to Campan; and has never since had possession, occupancy, care, or control over the land until just before the filing of the bills of complaint in these cases, when it took a possession of a few days, by building a fence around the square, for the purpose of laying a foundation for these suits.
I am unable to find any evidence of any formal abandonment by the county of its right to the use of this property for court-house purposes, or any definite intention to abandon it, save that which may be implied from so long a non-user of the premises.
There has been more or less quarreling among the members of the board of supervisors as to the location of a courthouse. The strife among those in favor of different localities has, as usual in such bodies, been quite warm, and extended over a number of years, with various resolutions passed and lost, reconsidered, passed, and lost again. Yet with all the discussion had, and action taken, no court-house has ever been built, or commenced to be built, upon any other spot, or any other place, definitely located for such building; and during most of the years something has been done looking towards the holding of the ground in controversy, and for the purposes intended by the dedication and acceptance in the first place.
The action of the board of supervisors in relation to this square may be summarized as follows:
From 1838 to 1851 courts were held uniformly in buildings erected upon the land for that purpose; the first lease taken of any place to hold courts, outside this square, commencing to run January 1, 1852.
*161Nothing appears of record touching the court-house square in the proceeding of the supervisors until the October session of 1856, when counsel were consulted and heard as to the validity of the title of the county to the same, who declared it to be good.
In 1850, through the instrumentality of -citizens of the northern half of the county, the Legislature passed an act (S. Laws 1850, 289, 290) appointing three commissioners “ to examine the present location of the county-seat of the county of Kent,” and “to proceed and ascertain whether, in their judgment, it is now located at such place as will most promote the interests of said county and if such commissioners should find it was not so located as to promote such interests, it was made their further duty “ to establish said county-seat at such place as they, or a majority of them, shall consider for the best interests of said county, upon such land as shall be deeded to the county for that purpose.”
The commissioners appointed by virtue of and under this act located said county-seat, in a report dated October 5,1850, upon a piece of land in the city of Grand Bapids, upon the east side of Grand river, owned by George Kendall, and Kendall executed a deed of the same to the county of Kent, which deed was delivered by said Kendall or the commissioners to the treasurer of said county for record, as appears by said report.
Thereupon, on the fourteenth day of October, 1850, Gov. John S. Barry issued a proclamation reciting said commissioners’ report and the recording of said report in the secretary of state’s office, as provided by said act, and declaring said location the lawfully established county-seat for said county of Kent.
I cannot find that this piece of ground so located was ever accepted by the county. It is claimed that this location shows an abandonment of the court-house square as the county-seat. I do not think so.
October 22,1850, a few days after the proclamation of the governor, the supervisors gave their consent that George *162Kendall and others might grade this lot, but, in the resolution granting such consent, expressly stipulated that nothing in such resolution “should be construed to obligate said board of supervisors to occupy the same for a county site.” Nothing was ever done, in any way, outside of the granting of this consent to grade, in recognition of this site ; and January 18, 1852, the chairman and clerk of the board were authorized to reconvey the premises to said Kendall, which they did. The land has therefore passed out of the possession and ownership of the county, and for over thirty years been in the hands of private parties. It cannot be and is not seriously contended here that such act of the Legislature, or the location of the commissioners appointed under such act, is now binding upon the county of Kent, or has been binding since the acceptance back by Kendall of the deed of the premises. When the supervisors refused, in substance, by their resolution of October 22, 1850, to recognize or accept said site, they were in the possession, control, and occupancy of the court-house square, and held the courts thereon until January 1, 1852. It is difficult to perceive what bearing the acts and doings of these commissioners have upon the question of the abandonment of the courthouse square by the county, except it be to strengthen the impression, considering these acts with the proceedings of the supervisors in relation thereto, that the county authorities meant to retain their right to the use of this square for court-house purposes.
It is also urged that about this time the county-seat was established on the west side of Grand river, in the city of Grand Rapids, and that by such location the court-house square was practically abandoned.
In October, 1851, a resolution to locate the “ county, site ” on the west side of the river, “ on lands formerly offered by Geo. Coggeshall,” was offered and voted down by the supervisors; but in the same month it was resolved to locate the “ county buildings ” upon the same premises, and a committee appointed and money appropriated to build a jail upon said site.
*163In view of the fact that the supervisors refused to locate the “county site ” there, and never built a court-house upon the land, but voted to locate the county buildings thereon, and built a jail only in connection with such vote, renders it extremely doubtful if there ever was an intention to locate the court-house there. No county buildings were erected •on this west-side land, and it was occupied only for jail purposes and sheriff’s residence.
In 1854 a struggle began, in the interest of the people upon the east side of the river", to get the location of the •county buildings back on that side, which conflict lasted from that time until 1860 or 1861, occupying more or less of the attention of the supervisors at every session of the board.
In February, 1857, certain citizens offered to donate a sum of money, and the free use of Luce’s Hall for court purposes for five years, if the supervisors would locate the court-house and other county buildings on the court-house square. ■ A resolution to accept such donation and locate accordingly, after discussion, and hearing of counsel pro and con upon the question, of the title of the county to the square, was lost by a vote of twelve yeas to thirteen nays. At the same session a resolution to raise $3,000 to be expended in building fire-proof county offices upon the site on the west side was voted down. The next day after this vote, a resolution was passed locating the site for the court-house and county buildings upon some lots upon the east side of the river, provided certain conditions were complied with by citizens of the county. Whether such conditions were ever complied with does not appear, but we hear nothing further about •such location.
No further proceedings appear in the records of the board •of supervisors in relation to the location of a court-house or ■county buildings until 1860, court being held and county •offices located in the meantime in rented rooms at various places.
January 13 of that year the title of the county to the court-house square was again brought before the supervisors. *164A resolution to locate the county offices on the west side was lost. A resolution locating the county offices on the courthouse square, provided the city would deed to the county its claim to the same and the county should be indemnified for any damage arising from changing the location of said offices, was passed by a vote of nineteen yeas to eight nays.
February 17, I860,, this was rescinded, “in order to bring the whole subject now under consideration before the board.” The next day the board resolved to submit to a vote of the people two propositions : one to locate the court-house and county buildings upon the court-house square, and the other to locate the same on the property on the west side of the river. On the same day a resolution'was adopted to build fire-proof county offices upon the Carroll lots, 61 and 66 of the Kent plat of the city of Grand Kapids, where they were built, and whore the present county offices of Kent county-are situated. The buildings rented for county offices before this were burned January 23, I860, destroying many records;
■ It is claimed that building these fire-proof offices upon these Carroll lots evinced a disposition upon the part of the county to locate the county-seat there ultimately, but the proofs show, as stated above, that, when it was voted to-build them, the ultimate location of the court-house and county buildings was submitted to the people. It also appears that a deed of the premises -was rejected by the supervisors because of the insertion of a clause therein that “the conveyance was for the purpose of erecting on said lots county offices.” The county required and finally obtained a deed conveying the absolute title in fee of the land.
The erection of these buildings was evidently of á temporary character, and for temporary purposes only, to avoid future dangers from fire, until such time as a permanent structure would be voted by the people, and June 12, 1871, a canvass of the votes cast at the spring election of that year showed a majority of three to one against a proposition to raise $5,000 to add another story to these buildings for court purposes.
The two propositions submitted to the voters of the county *165in the spring of 1860 decided nothing, as the votes were never canvassed or the result declared. The votes were canvassed as far as returned, but no returns being received from the townships of Algoma, Cannon, and Gaines, and the Second ward of the city of Grand Rapids, the result was never officially declared, nor any action taken by the supervisors thereon, except as hereinafter stated. Resolutions were offered in April, 1860 to accept the lot upon the west side, and defeated. Thereupon the owner of the premises upon that side withdrew his offer of the land, and, after considerable negotiations, the county paid him ground rent from 1851 up to 1862, and abandoned the further use of the premises for any purpose.
I do not apprehend that the use of this west-side land for jail purposes for 10 years or more, under the circumstances and proceedings heretofore set forth, can be construed or looked upon as a formal abandonment, during such period, by the county, of the court-house square for the purpose of a court-house. During nearly all this time there was a steady conflict going on as to the location of the court-house, with no definite result, except to prevent the erection of any county buildings anywhere, until the loss of the county records necessitated and brought about the temporary location and-building of fire-proof county offices where they now stand, on the corner .of Kent and Lyon streets.
Neither does the building and maintenance of the present jail building on property other than the court-house square cut any figure in the case. The old jail building on the west side being unfit to remove or use elsewhere, upon the abandonment of the lot upon the west side another lot was purchased and a jail erected, the people voting the funds for the same, without any reference whatever to the question of the location of the court-house and other county buildings.
After this vote in 1860, and the final ending of the claims of the west side to the county-seat, nothing further appears in the proceedings of the supervisors in relation to the site of the court-house until January 11, 1866, when a committee of the board, in a report upon the location of a jail, recom*166mended also the building of a court-house upon the courthouse square. A resolution was thereupon adopted, locating said court-house as recommended, yeas 23, nays 4. It was also voted to submit propositions to the people to raise $15,000 for jail and $40,000 for court-house. This proposition to raise money for the court-house, if submitted, must have been defeated by the people. It it not clear from the record that it was ever submitted.
In October, 1866, an account was presented to the supervisors for the grading and paving of Fulton street, south side of the public square, and being advised by the prosecuting attorney that the county had rights in said square, the same was ordered paid by a vote of the board.
From 1866 up to 1881 various acts upon the part of the supervisors were done in recognition of the location, in 1866, of the court-house upon the square, and nothing evincing any contemplated change in such location, excepting the proposition, submitted to the people in 1871, to raise the county offices another story as heretofore noted.
January 23, 1870, the board voted to pay a sewer tax upon the south half of the square. In 1874 the bpard again submitted to the people a proposition to raise $150,000 to build a court-house upon the court-house square,which was defeated by a vote of 3,130 for, to 4,305 against.
In January, 1881, the prosecuting attorney was directed to institute legal proceedings, as he might see fit, to determine the question of the title of the county to the square ; and by the sanction and direction of the board possession of the premises was take'n, and the same inclosed by a fence, and these suits commenced. The fence was completed on the eighth day of October, 1881, and was not molested by the city until October 24, 1881, when the marshal was ordered to tear it down. Between these dates, and on the thirteenth of October, the city presented an assessment of $208 against the court-house square for the paving of Monroe street,which the county paid, and received the receipt of the city treasurer therefor.
The city of Grand Rapids, as shown by the proceedings *167of its common council, does not seem ever to have held the south half of this public square adversely to the county. In fact, its whole supervision of both halves of the square has been but little if any more than citizens have forced out of it, to take this open spot under' its control for the purpose of keeping it clean, and accommodating the public as its use, with the growth of the city, became more and more desirable to the people for purposes of amusement. In October, 1850, the people wanted an appropriation to fence it. The council instructed a surveyor to survey it, leaving on each side a space of four rods for streets, and allowed the petitioners to build a fence at their own expense. At this time it is admitted that the county had taken no steps to abandon it, and were holding courts there; nor had the title of Campan been then acquired by the city.
August 12, 1852, the city acquired the title of Campau to the north half of the square, as heretofore noted, and paid him the sum of $500 therefor.
From 1850 to 1862 no authority seems to have been exercised over the ground, and the only action, outside of offering to quitclaim to the county, of the common council, was to lay upon the table a petition of citizens asking for an appropriation of $100 to improve it, refusing to instruct the marshal to prosecute persons for allowing swine and cattle to run thereon, and letting it once to a circus performance.
In 1862 an association of citizens, upon, request of said citizens, were allowed to plant trees upon it without expejxse to the city, and the council paid for painting the fence erected by the citizens under the permission granted in 1850.
Nothing further appears until 1865, when Mr. Gilbert was given the privilege of cultivating the grounds, and exclusive control for two years, to seed the premises at the end thereof, without expense to the city.
In 1867 the marshal was instructed to deposit 100 loads of dirt, the scrapings of the street, upon the public square.
In 1872 the marshal sold the grass on the premises for $10, and paid the same into the city treasury.
This is the sum total of the action, possession, or control *168of the city from 1850 to 1873, when the first public improvement was made by the city, an appropriation of $100 being voted in May of that year to “improve said park.” In the same year a speaker’s stand was built thereon, and the marshal instructed to see that the trees and grounds were properly protected. A gas-pipe was also laid to the music stand, and the fence again painted.
In 1874,1875, and 1876 thegates and fences were repaired, and sticks and stones removed, and in the latter year two drinking fountains and some benches placed in the square, or park.
In 1878 walks were constructed, and the fence removed. The square was not put under police surveillance until in September of that year, after a communication from the chief of police, setting forth that the park was in a most filthy condition, and resorted to by men and boys for the purpose of committing nuisances.
Since that date the park, of public square, has been looked after a little more closely by the city authorities, but no great expenditure has been made upon it.
It will be seen that the first dollar expended upon the ground, save the purchase money paid to Campau, was in 1873, only eight years before the commencement of these suits, the improvements before that time being the work entirely of private parties. .
The jurisdiction over the square upon the part of the city up to that date was no more than the customary exercise of a municipality over open and public places within its limits, and not at all inconsistent with or adverse to the title claimed by the county.
As showing the intention of the city in assuming the control it did, wo find the authorities, at two different times, offering their claim without recompense to the county in case the court-house should be located thereon. In 1850 they offered to quitclaim the interest of the city to the commissioners appointed by the Legislature to locate the county-seat, and again, in 1866, the council tendered to the committee of the supervisors to receive proposals “ all the right of the city *169to the public square for the purpose of locating the courthouse and other public buildings thereon.”
In recognition of the right of the county to hold this square, we find the city presenting and l’eceiving pay for accounts against the square as follows: 1866, grading and'paving Fulton ■street on the south side of public square; 1810, sewer tax upon the south half of the square; and in 1881, $208 assessed against the •“ court-house square ” for the paving of Monroe street. The first two payments appear to be on account of the south half alone, but the last, without any other explanation to be found in the record, seems to run against the whole property.
I am satisfied that the city, under the showing made, has not established any title by adverse possession against the county to either half of this square.
Hut it is argued that the title to the north half is good because of the conveyance by Louis Campan in 1852; that the county abandoned the premises in 1851; and that thereupon the land reverted to Campau, who took possession thereof, and held such possession at-the time he so deeded his interest to the city.
But, as heretofore shown, the county has never abandoned the premises, unless by non-user. As at the time of Cam-pan’s conveyance to the city the county had only ceased holding' -courts -thei-eon for less than eight months, Campau could have gained no title thereto by reason of non-user.
In my opinion, after the dedication of this piece of land by Campau for the purposes of a court-house, and the acceptance and -use -of it by the county for nearly fourteen years, the mere fact of selling the temporary building, unfit for court purposes any longer, to him, and the non-user of the premises for-a year, while a quarrel was going on about the location of county buildings elsewhere, without any definite result, could not revest him with the absolute title in fee, the same as he held before such dedication and acceptance: Baker v. Johnston, 21 Mich. 350. He could convey to the city the title he had, after dedication, in the soil, but it would be subject to the public use conferred by such dedication. *170There is no doubt whatever, from Campau’s own statements, that he gave this part of the square for court-house purposes, and from his deed to the city it is to be implied that in making such transfer he did not intend to divert it from such use; and the act of the city authorities, in tendering the title thus acquired to the county for such purposes in 1866, is not in harmony with their theory that they acquired the same for a public park, nor does the character of their supervision of the grounds from 1852 to 1873, a period of twenty-one years, tend at all in that direction.
The inquiry now arises as to what effect the non-user of this public or court-house square from 1852 to 1881 has had upon the rights of the county of Kent in the premises.
By the original dedication and acceptance of this square the county became vested with an estate therein in the nature of an easement. The ownership in fee is not claimed, but the right of the use of the premises for a court-house and county buildings.
Whether an easement or right of this kind can be lost by mere non-user is not settled to a certainty by the authorities. It must, at any rate, continue so long as to raise a reasonable presumption of abandonment: Hatch v. Dwight, 17 Mass. 289; Wilder v. St. Paul, 12 Minn. 208; Washb. Easem. 550-1 (edition of 1863); and what length of time is sufficient to create this presumption must be determined by the circumstances of each particular case. But such non-user must always have been of as long duration as the period that is required in order to gain the, easement by user — Washb. Easem. 551-2 (Id.) — and it is rarely, if ever, lost unless there is some evidence, outside of the mere non-user, showing an intent to abandon it, or there has been such use by the holder of the fee in or over the easement as to indicate a claim of right which is adverse to the enjoyment of the easement: Id. 551. Ward v. Ward, 7 Exch. 838; Townsend v. McDonald, 12 N. Y. 381; Smyles v. Hastings, 22 Id. 217; Wiggins v. McCleary, 49 Id. 346; White v. Crawford, 10 Mass. 188: Arnold v. Stevens, 24 Pick. 106-113; Owen v. Field, 102 Mass. 90-114; Barnes v. Lloyd, *171112 Id. 224. There must be, to constitute such adverse-use, an actual,- continued possession by some one, with a claim of adverse title, and with an open and notorious assertion of right or title against the owner of the easement: Livermore v. City of Maquoketa, 35 Iowa, 358; Humbert v. The Rector, 24 Wend. 587.
And in this case, where the dedication of a public square has been accepted and used for the purposes dedicated, a serious question arises whether the dedication is not irrevocable so long as the ground is not put to other uses and no^ court-house is built elsewhere. It is doubtful if any mere non-user in such case — the simple holding of the premises in abeyance without any use, but without any diversion from the purposes of its dedication — for any length of time, will work an abandonment or extinguishment of the easement: Wilder v. St. Paul, 12 Minn. 208; 2 Smith, Lead. Cas. 277.
The use of the premises in dispute here has never been inconsistent with the present or future occupation of the same for the uses and purposes of its dedication. Private persons have never interfered with its public use. The control of the city authorities, up to 1873, had in it no element of adverse use. It was simply a control that all municipalities exercise over common or open places within their limits ; and the control was so slight, as heretofore shown, as tO' carry with it no impression of an assertion of title. Since that time the possession and occupancy of this square by the city, if such possession can be called actual or adverse, has not been of sufficient duration to ripen into a title as against the county. The square has never lost its identity as the court-house square, and until it does must be considered still open to the public uses of its dedication: Townsend v. McDonald, 12 N. Y. 381; Hunter v. Sandy Hill, 6 Hill, 407.
There is no evidence connected with this non-user showing an intention on the part of the county to abandon its rights in the premises. It is true, the supervisors were shuffling about and quarreling among themselves as to the location of a county-seat from 1852 to 1866, for exactly the same number of years that they had before that used the *172square for court-house purposes; but in 1866, before any adverse possession or control was taken of the same by the city, the board of supervisors determined to locate the county-seat and- court-house upon it, to which determination they have ever since adhered.
Because no court-house has thus 'far been built upon this ground is no evidence of an intention to abandon it .for that purpose, so long as none has been erected elsewhere. Nor does the fact that the people have voted down appropriations to build the same affect the title of the county to this square. It is rather an evidence.of a refusal to raise money to build a court-house at all than of an expression against the site of its location.
If, after the burning of the court-house in 1844, none had been erected in its stead, and no movement had been made or entertained by the supervisors to locate one elsewhere, and the failure to build one had rested alone upon the fact that the people had not been ready to .vote money for that purpose, it would not, I think, be seriously contended that the non-user of the county, or the control of the city, as shown by this record, would have been in law an abandonment or extinguishment of the rights of the county in this square.
I find, as heretofore shown, in the proceedings of the supervisors, no fixed or settled intention of abandonment, but rather a purpose, during all the discussion of contemplated changes, to hold on to this public square for courthouse uses ; and, there being no adverse enjoyment by others sufficient to extinguish the right of the county, under the dedication and acceptance of the same, to use this public square for court-house purposes, it follows that such right has not been lost by the mere non-user of the premises.
It is also urged that the county, under its showing, if it has the right and title claimed, has a perfect and adequate remedy at law; that an action of ejectment would lie for. the possession of the premises; and also that the complainant had no such possession, at the time of filing its bills of complaint, as would entitle the county to file a bill to quiet title under the statute; that the possession taken by the supervisors in fenc*173ing and occupying said square was for the express purpose of commencing these suits, and was nothing more nor less than a trespass against the city, which really had possession.
No demurrer was filed in either case, or claim of demurrer embraced within the answers. The county, as before shown, •has only an easement for public uses in this square. The fee is in other parties. The right of possession for the purposes of building a court-house upon the land is the right disturbed or threatened, and for the settlement and determination of. this right these suits were brought. We do not consider it necessary to determine whether or not ejectment would lie for this right of possession under our statutes.
I have no doubt of the right of the complainant, in equity, to ask a determination and protection of its right in the premises, or of the power of the court to grant the relief asked. Watertown v. Cowen, 4 Paige, 510. And I also-think that, at the time of the filing of these bills of complaint, the county had sufficient and adequate possession to ask the quieting of its title.1 No other person or municipality, as heretofore shown, had any actual or exclusive possession of the premises at the time of the entry by the county. It completed its fence October 8, and no one interfered with such possession until October 24. The county had the right to take possession, having never lost its title under the dedication. It was in no sense a trespasser against the city, or any one; and, when'it had actually occupied the premises under this right, it was competent for it to invoke the aid and interposition of equity to protect its possession against a threatened invasion thereof.
For these reasons, given at length because of the import*174■anee of the questions involved, I am unable to agree with ’ my associates as to the disposition of these cases. In nay. opinion, both decrees were right in the court below, and ought to be affirmed.
How. Stat. § 6626, as amended by Act 260, Public Acts of 1887, p. 337, reads as follows: “Any person claiming the legal or equitable title to lands, whether in possession or not, may institute a suit in chancery against any other person, not in possession, setting up a claim thereto in opposition to the title claimed by the complainant, and if the complainant shall establish his title to such lands, the defendant shall be decreed to release to the complainant all claims, thereto, and pay costs, unless the defendant shall, by his answer, disclaim all title to such lands and give a release to the complainant, in which case costs shall be awarded as the court may deem just.”