THE TOWN OF HIGHLANDS, a North Carolina Municipal Corporation, on
behalf of its citizens and individually as an owner of property
in the Town of Highlands; and DENNIS F. WILSON, Plaintiffs, v.
GROVER WILLIAM EDWARDS, HELEN LOUISE MEISEL, and VIRGINIA MAE
FLEMING; HOWARD WAYNE BROWN and wife, JANIE CRESWELL BROWN; EARL
MONROE JONES, TRUSTEE OF THE EARL MONROE JONES TRUST; ARTHUR A.
LEWIS and wife, JANE A. LEWIS; JAMES LUTHER RAMEY and wife,
MAXINE BROWN RAMEY; LOUIS W. REESE, MARTHA R. LAMB, JOSEPH RONALD
No. COA00-221
(Filed 19 June 2001)
Highways and Streets--unopened--original map missing
The trial court erred by granting a directed verdict for
plaintiffs in a declaratory judgment action seeking a
determination of the rights, duties, and liabilities of the
parties concerning portions of streets which had never been
opened by the Town where the origin of the Town dated to 1875
when Samuel Kelsey began to sell lots and parcels; a map of the
Kelsey property subdivided into lots and streets was filed and
recorded in 1944, but there is nothing to show who recorded it or
its source and plaintiffs concede that the original map or plat
cannot be found; the Town passed a resolution in 1984 accepting
the offer of dedication contained in the map recorded in 1944
(the Kelsey map) and resolving to open the streets as required;
defendants objected and attempted to file notices of withdrawal
of the unopened streets; and the Town filed this action. Without
the original map or plat used in conveying lots, there is no way
to know whether the portions of streets disputed in this case
were included. The deeds introduced by plaintiffs do not mention
or incorporate the Kelsey map, some of the lot numbers differ
from the map, the map contains no ascertainable monuments and few
metes and bounds descriptions, and there are discrepancies
between the results of the measurements made by the court
surveyor and the distances stated in the deeds. The evidence
presented by plaintiffs was not manifest as a matter of law and
the evidence presented by defendants was sufficient to take the
case to the jury.
Appeal by defendants from judgment entered 19 July 1999 by
Judge Raymond A. Warren in Macon County Superior Court. Heard in
the Court of Appeals 12 January 2001.
Coward, Hicks & Siler, P.A., by William H. Coward, for
plaintiffs-appellees.
Jones, Key, Melvin & Patton, P.A., by Richard Melvin, for
defendants-appellants.
CAMPBELL, Judge.
The Town of Highlands (Town) and an individual citizen
owning property in the Town (jointly, plaintiffs) brought a
declaratory judgment action seeking a determination as to the
rights, duties, and liabilities of the parties concerning
portions of certain streets which had never been opened by the
Town. Defendants are residents of the Town who owned property
which would be affected by the opening of these streets. At the
close of all the evidence, the trial court directed a verdict in
favor of plaintiffs and entered a judgment in which the court
answered three crucial issues of fact, on which plaintiffs bore
the burden of proof, in favor of plaintiffs.
(See footnote 1)
The trial courtruled that there was only one permissible legal inference to be
drawn from the evidence as to each of these three issues and thus
plaintiffs were entitled to an affirmative answer to each as a
matter of law. The court then concluded that the unopened
portions of the streets in question had been dedicated to the
Town and could be opened by the Town without the need for
condemnation of rights-of-way. The trial court entered judgment
accordingly.
Defendants appealed from this judgment contending that at
the very least there were issues of fact which required a jury
determination, and that as a result, the trial court erred in
directing a verdict for plaintiffs. We agree.
A motion for directed verdict, requires that the trial court
consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-
movant, and determine whether the evidence is sufficient as a
matter of law to be submitted to the jury. Delta Env.
Consultants of N.C. v. Wysong & Miles Co., 132 N.C. App. 160,
169, 510 S.E.2d 690, 696 (1999). A directed verdict in favor of
the party with the burden of proof is proper only when the
proponent has established a clear and uncontradicted prima faciecase and the credibility of his evidence is manifest as a matter
of law. Homeland, Inc. v. Backer, 78 N.C. App. 477, 481, 337
S.E.2d 114, 116 (1985). With this guiding principle in mind, we
turn to the case at hand.
The Town was established in the late 1800's. Its origin
dates back to 1875 when Samuel T. Kelsey (Kelsey) purchased
approximately 800 acres of mountain land and began to sell lots
and parcels out of this purchase. In 1883 the Town was chartered
and eventually assumed the maintenance of those streets which had
been opened for use by the public. The streets at issue here,
portions of 5th, 4 1/2, and Poplar Streets, were not open then
and have never been opened.
At the heart of the controversy is the so-called Kelsey
Map. This map purports to be a map of the original Kelsey
property as subdivided into lots and streets. On this map, the
disputed portions of 5th, 4 1/2, and Poplar Streets are depicted
as part of the streets laid out on the map. The Kelsey Map was
filed and recorded in the Macon County Register of Deeds in 1944.
There is nothing in the record to show who recorded the
Kelsey Map, and nothing to indicate the source of the map which
was recorded. The map contains no surveyor's certification and
it appears to be no more than a skeletal layout of the streets
and lots as opposed to a metes and bounds plat of these streets
and lots. Very few of these lots contain metes and bounds
descriptions, and some are not even numbered, but instead contain
only a person's name as identification of the lot.
Despite the lack of information authenticating the KelseyMap, the Town, in 1984, passed a resolution
147;accepting the
offer of dedication of streets, alleys, and rights-of-way
contained in the map and resolving to open the unimproved
portions of these streets as required, given the needs of the
Town. Defendants objected to this course of action and some of
them attempted to file notices of withdrawal of the disputed,
unopened streets pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 136-96. In
response, the Town filed the instant suit for declaratory
judgment to determine the respective rights of the parties to the
property in question.
We look first at the law regarding dedications. A
dedication of property to the public consists of two steps: (1)
an offer of dedication, and (2) an acceptance of this offer by a
proper public authority. Cavin v. Ostwalt, 76 N.C. App. 309,
311, 332 S.E.2d 509, 511 (1985). An offer of dedication can be
either express, as by language in a deed, or implied, arising
from the conduct of the owner manifesting an intent to set aside
land for the public. Bumgarner v. Reneau, 105 N.C. App. 362,
365, 413 S.E.2d 565, 568, modified and aff'd., 332 N.C. 624, 422
S.E.2d 686 (1992). In either case, whether express or implied,
it is the owner's intent to dedicate that is essential. See,
Milliken v. Denny, 141 N.C. 224, 229-30, 53 S.E. 867, 869 (1906);
Nicholas v. Salisbury Hardware & Furniture Co., 248 N.C. 462,
468, 103 S.E.2d 837, 842 (1958).
Once the offer of dedication is made, it must be accepted to
be effective. Rowe v. Durham, 235 N.C. 158, 161, 69 S.E.2d 171,173 (1952). In the case of a municipality, the acceptance must
take place in some legally recognized form, either expressly by a
resolution, order, or formal ratification, or impliedly by use
and control of the area by public authorities for a period of 20
years or more. Bumgarner, 105 N.C. App. at 366-67, 413 S.E.2d at
569, modified and aff'd., 332 N.C. 624, 422 S.E.2d 686 (1992).
An offer of dedication can be revoked at any time prior to
acceptance, but once acceptance is made, it becomes irrevocable.
Cavin v. Ostwalt, 76 N.C. App. 309, 312, 332 S.E.2d 509, 511
(1985); Rowe v. Durham, 235 N.C. 158, 160, 69 S.E.2d 171, 172
(1952).
Plaintiffs claim that Kelsey relied on a map or plat from
which he sold the lots, and that this is evidence of his intent
to dedicate the streets contained in that map or plat to the
public. Generally speaking, the sale of lots by reference to a
map or plat which represents a division of a tract of land into
streets and lots constitutes an offer to dedicate such streets to
public use. Andrews v. Country Club Hills, 18 N.C. App. 6, 8,
195 S.E.2d 584, 585 (1973). However, plaintiffs here have failed
to produce the map or plat from which the lots were actually
sold. Indeed, plaintiffs concede that the original map or plat
and subsequent maps made by the Town as early as 1899, cannot be
found. Without this evidence, we have no way of knowing whether
the original map used by Kelsey in conveying the lots of the Town
included the portions of 5th, 4 1/2, and Poplar Streets that are
disputed here. Plaintiffs have also introduced into evidence 143 deeds
showing a quilt-like pattern of lots with a definite street
system in between, which they contend proves the dedication of
the contested streets, including the disputed portions. Even
with this additional evidence, there is not a sufficient basis
for the trial court to have determined all legal inferences in
favor of plaintiffs and to have directed a verdict in favor of
plaintiffs. In order for this quilt-like pattern to have been
meaningful, plaintiffs would have had to show how the property
described in each deed was placed on the ground, the relationship
of the properties to what would be streets running between the
lots, and that the disputed portions of 5th, 4 1/2, and Poplar
Streets, even though unopened, were intended to have been part of
the original scheme of conveyance of these properties and streets
as plaintiffs claim.
Plaintiffs further contend that when an individual offers to
dedicate a street and the same is accepted, the whole street has
been accepted even if only a portion of the street is opened.
Assuming arguendo that there was an offer of dedication of the
streets as contended by plaintiffs (even though the entire street
was not opened), we have no definitive proof that the streets in
question were ever intended to extend beyond the present
boundaries of the opened streets. Kelsey could have just as
easily intended for these streets to end at their present
termini. 'There can be no such dedication contrary to the
intention of the landowner.' Milliken, 141 N.C. at 230, 53 S.E.
at 869 (quoting Leonard A. Jones, A Treatise on the Law ofEasements § 425, at 335-36 (1898)). It would be a dangerous
invasion of rights of property, after many years and after the
removal by death or otherwise of the original parties to the deed
and conditions have changed, to impose, by implication, . . .
such burdens on land. Id. at 231, 53 S.E. at 870. Without
proof as to Kelsey's intent, we refuse to speculate on whether or
not he intended to dedicate the portions of the streets here at
issue.
The Town argues that the Kelsey Map and the deeds to the
lots of the town prove Kelsey's intent to dedicate the disputed
portions of 5th, 4 1/2, and Poplar Streets, which it then
accepted by the 1984 resolution. Despite the trial court's
findings, defendants have shown that there is more than only one
permissible legal inference [that] can be drawn from the evidence
presented. First, none of the deeds introduced by plaintiffs
mention the Kelsey Map or incorporate it by reference. Second,
the lot numbers in some of these deeds are different from the lot
numbers on the Kelsey Map that they supposedly represent, which
tends to indicate that a different map may have been used when
conveying the lots. Third, the Kelsey Map contained no
ascertainable monuments and few metes and bounds descriptions,
which also tends to indicate that a different map may have been
used in conveying the lots. Finally, there are discrepancies
between the results of the measurements made by the court
surveyor (W. Edward Hall who prepared the surveys referred to in
issue number one) regarding the properties in dispute, and the
distances stated in the actual deeds to the property. As stated above, a directed verdict considers the evidence
in the light most favorable to the non-movant (defendants here)
to determine if it is sufficient to go to the jury; and a
directed verdict in favor of the party with the burden of proof
(plaintiffs) is improper unless the evidence is manifest as a
matter of law. We find that the evidence presented by plaintiffs
was not manifest as a matter of law, and that the evidence
presented by defendants was sufficient to require that the case
be taken to the jury. We therefore conclude that the trial court
erred in directing verdict for plaintiffs, and remand for a jury
trial.
Reversed and remanded.
Judges WALKER and HUNTER concur.
Footnote: 1 1. Did S. T. and Katherine Kelsey, during their lifetimes,
offer for public use the rights of way as shown on the
survey by W. Edward Hall dated March 19, 1998 including
the third revision dated October 10, 1998, for 5th
Street, 4 1/2 Street and Poplar Street, including the
unimproved portions of said rights of way?
The burden of proof on this issue is on the plaintiffs.
On this issue the Court finds that the evidence is almost
wholly documentary in nature, that no human party
survives from the time of the alleged dedication, that
the evidence is credible and that only one permissible
legal inference can be drawn from the evidence presented
and that evidence proves as a matter of law that the
Plaintiffs are entitled to an affirmative answer to this
issue.