26 A. 58 | R.I. | 1893
The complainant seeks to restrain the respondents, the town council of the town of Tiverton, from opening two alleged highways, which he claims are not highways but his own private land. The land in question was formerly within the territory held by the Plymouth Colony, until it was restored to Rhode Island, by order of the king, A.D. 1746, and within the portion known as the Puncatesett Purchase. The primary question is whether such highways have ever been established on the complainant's land. The respondents refer to "Records of the Town of Plymouth," where under the date of March *183 22, 1663,1 is a descriptive list of the several lots at Puncatesett neck. In the list, several lots, included in the land in question, are referred to as bounded on highways; one of which is a highway between lots 1 and 2 at the south point which "goeth from this lott and share to a spring at the head of the Cove;" and the other is a highway that "goeth to the Cove." The proprietors' records2 are also put in evidence, in which, under date of April 2, 1680, the same lots are similarly described with substantially the same references to the highways, some of the courses being given. Without repeating the numerous references to the highways which appear in these records, in bounding and describing the lots, it is evident that they show a setting off of lots, with ways, which are called highways, for access to such lots. The complainant urges that these records ought not to be received as evidence because there is no evidence as to the person or officer who made them; because they do not assume to be grants; because they do not appear to be declarations by any ancestor in title of the complainant; because they are not certified to by a public officer; because there is no legal evidence of the date when they were made and because there is no evidence which identifies the lots as the lands of the complainant.
It is hardly to be expected that the records and conveyancing of an infant colony will show the exactness and technicality which is required at the present time. Nevertheless, ancient public records produced from the proper custody and reputed to be genuine are admissible as evidence. This is true not only as to public corporate records but also as to records of companies of proprietors, under whose authority tracts of land have been been divided or disposed of. Pitts v. Temple,
The grounds upon which the latter class of cases rests are variously stated; as, that an obstruction is a nuisance and no nuisance can ripen into a right; that individuals may reasonably be held to a limited period to enforce their rights against adverse occupants, because they have interest sufficient to make them vigilant; while in public rights of property, each individual feels but a slight interest and will tolerate a manifest encroachment rather than seek a dispute to set it right; that public policy requires the preservation of public rights and that a municipality cannot by permissive neglect invest an intruder with title to a public highway. These reasons are very cogent and in our opinion outweigh the authorities which are opposed to them. The case of Simmons v. Cornell, supra, held this doctrine to the extent of denying the *188 right to gain title to a highway by encroachment; but it did not pass upon the question of an exclusive possession of the whole way. We are unable to see upon what sound principle the right can be denied in one case and not in the other. True it may be said that an entire possession of the way furnishes a presumption of abandonment which does not apply to a partial possession; but it may also be said that if a public right cannot be extinguished in the whole lay out, when enough is left unencumbered for convenient travel, the reason is stronger that the right cannot be extinguished altogether. The general doctrine of Simmons v.Cornell has never before been questioned in this State.
Judge Dillon says, § 674, supra, that a municipal corporation "does not own and cannot alien public streets or places and no mere laches on its part or on that of its officers can defeat the right of the public thereto; yet there may grown up, in consequence, private rights of more persuasive force in the particular case than those of the public." This sentence has been criticised, (see City of Fort Smith v.McKibben, and City of Wheeling v. Campbell, supra,) as a compromise between the authorities which sustain the right of adverse possession on one side and the contrary doctrine which he so stoutly maintains in his text book, on the other. We think there is good sense in the suggestion and one phase of the case illustrates its application. It is shown that the highway in question if now relaid as it was originally, will go through the complainant's walls, buildings, orchard and cultivated lands, to the great injury of his farm; while, in fact, another way, substantially parallel, has been used instead of the original one, outside of these obstructions. Without yielding the doctrine that the public cannot be ousted of its right by adverse possession, it is not at all inconsistent to hold that, under a new dedication, another way equally convenient, has been substituted, by general and long continued acquiescence, for the original way. The right of the public to a highway, without substantial detriment, is preserved, while its particular location may have been varied by common consent. The old right is not extinguished, although its exercise may be *189
transferred to the new way. Judge Dillon puts it upon the ground of an estoppel in pais, but the principle of substitution appears to us to be a stronger ground. See Hamilton v. White,
It is not for us, in this case, to define the line of the highway, but simply to say whether the town of Tiverton should be enjoined from defining it. Our conclusion is that highways existed, substantially as claimed by the respondents, from the time of the allotment of land, as shown by the records; that the public right is not extinguished by adverse possession, as claimed by the complainants; that the town of Tiverton is entitled to reopen these highways, as originally laid out, or as varied by substitution where that fact appears.