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<br><br>82.400 Procedure for dedicating public way or easement -- Waiver in certain <br>instances -- Presumption of dedication -- Railroad exemption -- Automatic <br>acceptance -- Penalty. <br>(1) If any person desires to offer for dedication by recorded plat any public way or <br>easement within the jurisdictional limits of the city or a consolidated local <br>government, he or she shall file with the legislative body of the city or a <br>consolidated local government, a map or plat of the territory bounded, intersected, <br>or immediately adjacent to the proposed public way or easement, showing the <br>proposed name, nature, and dimensions of the public way or easement offered for <br>dedication. If the legislative body of the city or a consolidated local government <br>decides the proposed dedication would be beneficial to the public interest and <br>suitable for the immediate or future acceptance of the city or consolidated local <br>government, it shall approve the map or plat, and the mayor shall subscribe a <br>certificate of approval on the map and acknowledge the execution thereof before <br>any public officer authorized to take acknowledgments of deeds. The map or plat <br>may then be recorded in the office of the county clerk. <br>(2) Except as provided for by ordinance in a consolidated local government, in a city of <br>the first class, or in a county containing a city of the first class, subdivision <br>regulations which have been adopted as provided in KRS Chapter 100, and where <br>streets or public ways as dedicated on the final subdivision plat have been <br>constructed, inspected, and approved in accordance with the subdivision <br>regulations, then the procedure for filing the map or plat with the legislative body of <br>the consolidated local government, city, or county, as the case may be, as required <br>in subsection (1) of this section shall be waived, and the dedicated street or public <br>way shall automatically be deemed beneficial to the public interest and shall be, by <br>operation of law, automatically accepted for maintenance by the consolidated local <br>government, city, or county, respectively, forty-five (45) days after inspection and <br>final approval, and shall be a public way for all purposes, KRS Chapter 83A, <br>regarding a city's, county's, or consolidated local government's adoption of <br>ordinances notwithstanding. <br>(3) When any property has been opened to the unrestricted use of the general public for <br>five (5) consecutive years, it shall be conclusively presumed to have been dedicated <br>to the city or consolidated local government as a public way or easement, subject to <br>acceptance by the city or consolidated local government. The city or consolidated <br>local government may, at any time after the expiration of five (5) years from the <br>time the property is opened to the public, pass an ordinance declaring it so <br>dedicated, and accepting the dedication, whereupon it shall be a public way or <br>easement of the city or consolidated local government for all purposes. The lack of <br>an actual dedication to the city or consolidated local government, or of a record title <br>on the part of the city or consolidated local government, shall be no defense against <br>the collection of any tax that may be levied against property abutting thereon for the <br>payment of the cost of any improvement constructed thereon by order of the city or <br>consolidated local government. Nothing herein shall be construed to require the <br>expiration of five (5) years to raise a presumption of dedication in any case where, <br><br>under any rule of law in force in this state, a dedication would be presumed in less <br>than five (5) years. Provided, however, that property of a railroad company shall not <br>be presumed to be dedicated as a public way or easement under this section or any <br>other rule of law in force in this state unless the company consents to said <br>dedication in writing. <br>(4) Any person who shall lodge for record in the county clerk's office, and any county <br>clerk or deputy who shall receive for record or permit to be lodged for record, any <br>plat, map, deed, or other instrument contrary to the provisions of this section, shall <br>be fined not less than twenty-five dollars (&#36;25) nor more than one hundred dollars <br>(&#36;100) for each offense. <br>Effective: July 15, 2002 <br>History: Amended 2002 Ky. Acts ch. 346, sec. 95, effective July 15, 2002. -- Amended <br>2000 Ky. Acts ch. 417, sec. 9, effective December 1, 2000. -- Amended 1992 Ky. <br>Acts ch. 435, sec. 4, effective July 14, 1992. -- Amended 1990 Ky. Acts ch. 362, <br>sec. 13, effective July 13, 1990. -- Amended 1988 Ky. Acts ch. 371, sec. 1, effective <br>July 15, 1988. -- Created 1980 Ky. Acts ch. 233, sec. 1, effective July 15, 1980. <br>Legislative Research Commission Note (12/1/2000). The contingency on the <br>effectiveness of this statute set by 2000 Ky. Acts ch. 417, sec. 18, was met, the voters <br>of the Commonwealth having ratified at the general election on November 7, 2000, a <br>constitutional amendment (see 2000 Ky. Acts ch. 399) abolishing the Railroad <br>Commission. <br><br>