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Parking rights to public
property
A question posed to Florida's
Attorney General. April 20, 1978.
Les W. Burke
Bay County Attorney
Panama City
QUESTION:
What rights does the public have to a parcel of property shown on a plat filed
in 1953 by a development corporation in Bay County and which is labeled
'reserved for parking'?
SUMMARY:
Regarding the status of title to, or the rights of the public in, a parcel of
property shown on a plat filed in 1953 by a development corporation and which is
labeled 'reserved for parking,' such property may have been dedicated to public
use so long as the governing body, representing the public, can legally
establish by competent proof both an intent on the part of the subdivider to
dedicate it to public use and its own proper acceptance of the
owner/subdivider's offer of dedication. If a dedication has indeed occurred, the
public may not be deprived of the use of the subject property without its
consent.
From the facts you include in your opinion request, I have constructed the
following factual situation upon which your request seems to be based. In 1953 a
plat was filed by the Gulf Lagoon Beach Corporation in Bay County. It plats
several blocks of property, including one known as Block 17 and consisting of 15
lots, which are platted for commercial purposes and which, according to your
letter, now contain a small shopping center. Between this block and a major
state highway there is situated a parcel of property labeled 'reserved for
parking,' which apparently appears on the Bay County tax rolls as exempt
property, and no taxes are assessed against it. The plat also contains the
following statement signed by the President of Gulf Lagoon Beach Corporation and
attested to by its secretary:
. . . Gulf Lagoon Beach Corp. . . . hereby
dedicates streets, roads & etc. [sic] for public use and public ways
except that all utility and franchise rights remain with the dedicators.
Also filed in 1953 in Bay County was a document entitled Restrictive Covenants,
applying by its terms to all the real property described in the plat. It states
in part:
5. No business or store buildings shall be placed
or constructed and no business, trade or manufacturing of any sort or nature
shall be conducted upon the property herein described, except lots 1 through
15 inclusive in Block 17 . . .. (Emphasis supplied.)
It seems from your letter that the Board of County Commissioners of Bay County
has recently become aware that gas pumps, a commercial sign, a fence, and a
house have all been placed upon the parcel of land designated on the plat as
'reserved for parking.' You specifically inquire as to the status of the rights
of the public in the subject parcel. For the purposes of this opinion, I assume
that your inquiry concerns the rights of the general public at large and not
simply the residential or commercial property owners whose property appears on
the plat, since in the latter situation it would be the property owners
themselves who must take any legal action to determine or enforce their rights.
Initially, I would point out that this office is not a fact-finding body and as
such is without the power to adjudicate 'the status of title' to real estate.
Further, from the facts stated in your inquiry, which I have outlined above, I
am unaware of a number of important factors which could be determinative of your
question. For instance, I am unaware of how the property or any right therein is
being claimed by the persons erecting the commercial sign, gas pumps, fence, and
house on the parcel of land designated on the plat as 'reserved for parking.'
Certainly, if those who have erected such structures on the 'reserved' property
actually have acquired title or color of title or other interests in or to such
property from the original developer of the property, or its successors or
assigns, the analysis will be different than if they are adverse users of the
property. Neither am I aware of the circumstances surrounding or representations
made at the time of the sale and conveyance of the platted properties. In any
event, it should be observed that the question of whether the public or the
owners of the platted lots have acquired rights in property by dedication or by
implied easement is a mixed question of law and fact which must be determined by
a court in appropriate adversary proceedings initiated for that purpose.
However, the following analysis and discussion of Florida law may prove helpful
to you.
A dedication is simply the donating or appropriating of one's own land for use
by the public. That is, the owner of dedicated property is precluded from using
it in any way inconsistent with the public's use thereof. No finding can be made
that a dedication has occurred without an offer, express or implied, by the
owner of the property and an acceptance by the public. The owner's intention to
dedicate must be clearly indicated by his words or acts. There can be no offer
of dedication without the owner's knowledge. This element of intent has been
stated by the Supreme Court of Florida to be the 'foundation and essence of
every dedication.' City of Palmetto v. Katsch, 98 So. 352 (Fla.
1923), cited with approval in City of Hollywood v. Zinkil, 283
So.2d 581 (4 D.C.A. Fla., 1973), and Hollywood, Inc. v. City of Hollywood,
321 So.2d 65 (Fla. 1975). However, intent need not be formally manifested and
any affirmative act of the owner will suffice to show his intent. For example,
one way to dedicate property to public use is by map or plat. It appears that no
particular words are required to be upon the plat in order to find that an offer
of dedication was made. See, e.g. Florida East Coast
Ry. Co. v. Worley,
38 So. 618 (Fla. 1905) and Miami Beach v. Undercliff Realty and Investment
Co., 21 So.2d 783 (Fla. 1945).
The plat presently under consideration recites that the developer dedicates to
public use, 'streets roads & etc. [sic]' (Emphasis supplied.) The term
'etc.' is generally accepted to mean other things of a type or character which
has been specifically named. That is, its meaning depends upon description and
enumeration of things previously named or preceding the term, since they
describe the kind of subject matter the term includes. Anderson v. Kerr
Drilling Co. v. Bruhlmeyer, 115 S.W.2d 1212 (Ct. Civ. App. Tex. 1938); Forman
v. Columbia Theater Co., 148 P.2d 951 (Wash. 1944); Wright v.
People, 181 P.2d 447 (Colo. 1947). Therefore, in the present context,
the term means things like and similar to streets and roads, dedicated 'for
public use and public ways.' Off-street parking areas designated as 'reserved'
on a plat would not ordinarily be included in this category, which appears to
consist only of through passage or access ways to the platted lots. Cf., e.g.,
s. 192.011, F. S., which provides for assessment of all property in a county by
the property appraiser, except that 'streets, roads, and highways,' dedicated to
or otherwise acquired by a governmental unit may be assessed but need not be.
While not conclusive for our purposes, the statute does show that thoroughfares
and access ways, not including defined off-street parking areas, constitute a
category of properties commonly dedicated to public use.
The plat itself labels the subject property 'reserved for parking.' It may be
stated as a general proposition that a reservation made on a plat for a
specified purpose implies a reservation for the private use of the owner. Cf.
City of Jacksonville v. Shaffer, 144 So. 888, 890-891 (Fla. 1932), and Powers
v. Scobie, 60 So.2d 738, 739 (Fla. 1952). However, this is not always
the case and particularly where a developer is concerned, the reservation may
constitute an implied easement for the private use of the purchasers of the
platted residential lots in the subdivision; cf. Feig v. Graves,
100 So.2d 192, 195 (2 D.C.A. Fla., 1958); it may be a reservation for the public
at large or perhaps an easement for the benefit of customers parking at the
commercial establishments provided for on the plat was intended. I am unable to
make a determination about this from the facts before me, and as hereinbefore
noted, I am not a factfinder or an adjudicator. See, generally, 10 Fla. Jur.
Dedication ss. 26 and 27 and AGO 061-179. Cf. East Coast
Ry. Co. v. Worley,
supra; Reiger v. Anchor Post Products, Inc., 210 So.2d 283 (3
D.C.A. Fla. 1968); and Murrell v. U.S., 269 F.2d 458 (5th Cir.
1959).
Your letter also points out that no taxes are assessed against the parcel in
question. It has been held, when an alleged dedication to the public is
challenged, that the fact that no taxes are assessed against the property in
dispute is evidence tending to show a dedication and its acceptance by the
public. See U.S. v. 936.71 Acres of Land, 418 F.2d 551 (5th Cir.
1969); Cf. Miami v. Jansik, 89 So.2d 644 (Fla. 1956); also see 26
C.J.S. Dedications s. 40. (7); but see Ocean Nav. Co. et al. v. Town of
Palm Beach, 152 So. 853, 856 (Fla. 1934), which states that the mere
fact that the land has not been taxed does not deprive its owners of legal
rights therein. However, tax assessment is but one of a number of factors a
court considers in determining the public's rights vel non in the property, and
the fact that it is not on the tax rolls is not conclusive. If the property were
found to be subject to easement rights in the commercial property owners for
customer use or in the adjoining residential owners and purchasers of the
platted property, but not in the public at large, then it, by law, should be on
the tax rolls and is subject to ad valorem taxation regardless of whether it in
fact appears thereon. See AGO's 074-346, 073-257, and 061-111. Cf. Homer
v. Dadeland Shopping Center, Inc., 229 So.2d 834 (Fla. 1969); see also Department
of Revenue v. Morgenwoods Greentrees, Inc., 341 So.2d 756 (Fla. 1956),
and McNayr v. Claughton, 198 So.2d 336 (3 D.C.A. Fla., 1967).
The second crucial element of a dedication is the acceptance, express or
implied, of the owner's offer by the public. City of Miami Beach v. Miami
Beach Improvement Co., 14 So.2d 172 (Fla. 1943). It is this act or
acceptance that makes the dedication complete. The offer to dedicate may be
revoked prior to acceptance, but it has been said that once acceptance is shown,
the dedication operates in the manner of an estoppel in pais and the public, so
long as it uses the land for the purpose of the dedication, may not be deprived
of its use. Mainor v. Hobbie, 218 So.2d 203 (1 D.C.A. Fla., 1969).
Acceptance of the dedication on behalf of the public may be made by persons
competent and authorized to act for the public. Your letter provides no
indication of formal acceptance of the original subdivider's offer to dedicate,
assuming there was such an offer in this instance. However, acceptance as well
as the offer of dedication may be implied either by an act of a public body or
by use by the public. Smith v. City of Melbourne, 211 So.2d 66 (4
D.C.A. Fla., 1968); Sebolt v. State Road Department, 176 So.2d 590
(1 D.C.A. Fla., 1965); Waterman v. Smith, 94 So.2d 186 (Fla.
1952). If use by the public is considered to show the requisite intent to
dedicate the property and the public's acceptance of the dedication, it is to be
stressed that this use need not be hostile or adverse to the interest of the
owner. In fact, because the owner's intent to dedicate is paramount, a
dedication presupposes public use consistent with the owner's interest and with
his knowledge and consent. Though the public may use the property for an
extended period of time, there can be no dedication unless it clearly appears
that the owner knows of such use in order to give rise to the presumption that
he intended to dedicate the property. See, generally, 23 Am. Jur.2d Dedications
s. 28. It is not stated specifically in your inquiry whether the public at large
has in fact used the subject parcel for parking over the years or for what
purposes. However, since the plat itself appears somewhat ambiguous concerning
the restriction or the reservation of the parcel or the use thereof, the actual
use of the property and the purposes for such use and any representations made
by the subdivider in connection with the sale and conveyance of the platted
properties or subsequent instruments conveying or granting rights in the
property or to the use thereof would bear on the determination of the question.
The burden of proof is on the party claiming the dedication; accordingly, the
county commission, asserting in court the public's right to use the parcel
reserved for parking (or, the private residential owners of the platted property
asserting in court their private rights to use it), would be required to prove
by 'clear, satisfactory and unequivocal evidence' both the intent to dedicate
land to the public and public acceptance thereof. Pocock v. Town of Medley,
89 So.2d 162 (Fla. 1956); City of Miami Beach v. Miami Beach Improvement
Co., supra; City of Miami v. Fla. East Coast Rwy. Co., 84
So.2d 726 (Fla. 1920); Bishop v. Nussbaum, 175 So.2d 321 (2 D.C.A.
Fla. 1965).
A concept similar to dedication is that of grants of private use by easement. It
is necessary to consider the concept, even though your question concerns public
rights in the property, since the creation of an easement in the adjoining
commercial or residential lot purchasers would clearly affect the public's
interest vel non. An easement is a privilege in the owner of a tenement to enjoy
in or over that of another, who is obligated not to use his land so as to
interfere with such use. An easement may be created by express grant, by
prescription, or by implication. Cannell v. Arcola Housing Corp.,
65 So.2d 849 (Fla. 1953); Wyatt v. Parker, 128 So.2d 431 (2 D.C.A.
Fla., 1961). The easement rights of abutting or adjacent purchasers of platted
lots in the subdivision do not depend upon dedication principles, but on a
private easement implied from sales with reference to a plat showing streets,
parks, or other areas subject to the purchasers' use or enjoyment and such
easements are vested or perfected in the grantees immediately upon conveyance;
such rights are determined on the basis of private property interests as opposed
to public dedications. Burnham v. Davis Islands, Inc., 87 So.2d 97
(Fla. 1956); Reiger v. Anchor Post Products,
Inc., 210 So.2d 283
(3 D.C.A. Fla., 1968). Whether there was an easement granted to the commercial
or the residential lot owners in the instant situation or whether a reservation
was made for the benefit of the customers of the commercial property owners is,
as noted, up to a court of competent jurisdiction to determine on the basis of
properly proven facts. It may be stated, however, that an implied easement may
arise in the owners of platted lots by virtue of designation on the plat. See,
e.g., Wilson v. Dunlap, 101 So.2d 801 (Fla. 1958); McCorquodale
v. Kayton, 63 So.2d 906 (Fla. 1953). If this is the case in the instant
situation, then it may well be that the general public has no rights in or to
the use of the property at all and any rights in the lot owners would have to be
determined in a suit properly brought by them. (Compare the elements of and
principles of law applicable to an easement appurtenant and an easement in
gross. An easement of the latter type is personal to the property owners and
more in the nature of a license than a property interest. Burdine v.
Sewell, 109 So. 648 [Fla. 1926].)
Therefore, if it can be established by competent proof that there has been an
offer of dedication to the public (as opposed to an easement created in the
platted low owners) and that the offer of dedication has been properly accepted,
and that the public has parking rights in the 'dedicated' or 'reserved'
property, the county commission or a private citizen with a special injury
resulting from the presence of the obstructions complained of has the requisite
standing to sue to remove them. Otherwise, if there is an easement in the
platted property owners, the general public has no rights in the property and
such owners must seek any legal remedies that may be available to them.
Prepared by:
Frank A. Vickory
Assistant Attorney General
These pages are taken from sources that are
assumed to be public domain. If any copyrighted material is contained
within these pages, please notify the webmaster at gregs@tampabay.rr.com
and those pages will be removed immediately.
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