142 Minn. 473 | Minn. | 1919
The action is for a mandatory injunction to undo the grading defendant did on a road along the west line of plaintiff’s land, and for incidental damages. Defendant prevailed, and plaintiff appeals.
Plaintiff described the land he owned and alleged that, for many years, he had maintained a driveway running south, upon the west boundary, from the Shakopee road to the southwest comer of his premises, and that such driveway was for his personal use. He also alleged that defendant wrongfully entered upon this road with teams and road construction equipment, graded, scraped and filled the road to a full width of from 16 to 21 feet, leaving deep cuts at the sides, so that plaintiff is inconvenienced in harvesting his crops and cultivating the field, and that, in so widening the road, a portion was taken upon which grain and grass were growing. Defendant as a defense alleged that Peter Bruns, Peter Yan Sloun, Theodor Northermann, and Peter Willems, tenants in common of the quarter section wherein is the land of plaintiff and defendant, for the purpose of establishing a cartway, conveyed the quarter section to Franz Rossen under an agreement that Rossen should convey to each his respective share with a right to a cartway to the Shakopee road to those parcels not otherwise accessible to that road; that, pursuant to the agreement, conveyances were executed, delivered and recorded on May 30, 1§67, and thereby a cartway was established, two rods in? width, at the place where plaintiff claims defendant graded the road. It is also alleged that, from the time of conveyance to defendant’s ancestor, the road has been used by the occupants of the tract conveyed and has been repaired whenever necessary.
The chief attack is upon the findings, to the effect, that by agreement and deed, pursuant thereto, an easement was granted defendant’s ancestor along the west line of plaintiff’s land for a cartway two rods wide, and that defendant now owns an easement in said two-rod strip of land
By means of the plat found in the record, and which we here reproduce in its main outline, the situation will be more readily comprehended.
Plaintiff has succeeded to all the rights of his father, Peter Bruns, in this quarter section, and so has defendant to his father, Peter Willems. One of plaintiff’s contentions is that the description of the reserved way
Plaintiff confidently asserts that the right of way granted Peter Wil-lems, over the reservation made in the Bruns’ deed, created an easement in gross, personal to Peter Willems, and not an easement appurtenant to the land conveyed to him. The legal point to this contention is based on the fact that the right of way does not reach the tract conveyed to Peter Willems, for part of the land deeded to Van Sloun intervenes, and the deed to Van Sloun did not grant a way over plaintiff’s land.
There is a finding that, prior to 1902, Peter Willems acquired a strip of about two acres which connects the parcel conveyed to him by the deed of May 30, 1867, and the road in question, but we find no evidence thereof in the record (the files in the court below were not transmitted to this court). There is evidence that defendant’s farm buildings are situated on these two acres. We regard the finding as immaterial, for no easement went to the Van Sloun land, and none could be acquired by a purchase thereof, unless it be true that the cartway was, by the act of the parties to the conveyances of May 30, 1867, dedicated and established as a public highway, intended to have the same standing as if laid out under the statute. That theory has not been advanced or argued on this appeal, and, for the purpose of this decision, we will assume that no right of way is appurtenant to the Van Sloun tract.
We are, therefore, of the opinion that the finding that defendant has an easement over this cartway on plaintiff’s land must be sustained upon the proposition that it was acquired through the conveyance of tract C to his father Peter Willemsjiy the deed of May 30, 1867. That being so, there must be a judgment in defendant’s favor, regardless of the propriety of some of the other findings, unless defendant, by the work done upon the land subject-to this right of way easement, wrongfully invaded plaintiff's rights.
Several assignments of error relate to the admission of evidence of work done by defendant and his father upon this road. • Such evidence was objected to not only on the mistaken notion that defendant was required to plead the necessity for repairs, but also on the ground that no road by prescription or statutory user was pleaded. As to the latter, it may be conceded that the answer is inadequate. But even so, we think
This covers the controlling points presented by the appeal, and leads to an affirmance of the order.