136 N.W. 1082 | N.D. | 1912
This action was commenced by Burleigh county on July 20, 1910, and seeks to perpetually restrain the defendant, H. C. Rhud, from obstructing a certain trail alleged by the plaintiff to be a public highway. Although the complaint alleges that the highway in question is a public highway, the claim of the plaintiff (Burleigh county) is based upon prescription, merely. A permanent injunction was granted by the trial judge, and an appeal has been taken to this court. The lower court found as findings of fact, “that for more than twenty-two years prior to the year 1909, and up to the commencement of this action, a highway extending across the east half of section 27, township 139 north, range 80 west, of the fifth principal meridian, Burleigh county, beginning at a point on the center of Soo Railway, 1.15 chains west of the corner of sections 22, 23, 26, and 27 of said township and range, thence running in a southwesterly direction across said portion of section 27 to a point 1.65 chains east of the southwest corner of said east half of section 27 on the east and west line between section 27 and 34 of said township and range, and thence continuing into the city of Bismarck, as alleged in plaintiff’s complaint, has been used and traveled by the general public openly, notoriously, continuously, peaceably, and adversely.” This finding seems to us to be borne out by the evidence. It is shown that until the defendant acquired such land on April 28, 1909, the same had at all times been an open, wild, and uncultivated
Nor do-we understand the law to be as contended for by counsel for appellant, that under a statute such as ours it is necessary to show that the public authorities have worked or expended money upon the particular road in question. Such lack of improvement and expenditure
Although we hold that the highway in question has been in the open, notorious, and peaceable use of the public for more than twenty years prior to the bringing of this suit, and the attempt to fence it on the part of the defendant, we agree thoroughly with counsel for appellant that such adverse user does not date back to a period prior to the year 1876, nor did the trial court so find. If, therefore, his contention is correct that a user for twenty or twenty-two years prior to the fencing will not be sufficient to vest the use of the highway in the public, and that such user must be dated back twenty years from January 1, 1896, when § 1050, Rev. Codes, 1895, went into operation, plaintiff fails, and the judgment of the district court must be reversed. Appellant’s contention, in short, is that we have no statute in North Dakota providing for the acquiring of public highways by prescription except chapter 112, p. 212, Laws of 1897, and that that act was prospective merely. The title of this act reads: “An Act Delating to Opening and Yacating Highways. Prescribing the Duties of Supervisors and County Commissioners iñ Eelation thereto, and Eegulating Appeals from the Awards thereof, and the Eepeal of §§ 1050 to 1075, both inclusive, of the Eevised Codes of 'North Dakota.” Section 1 therefor provides: The “public roads and highways within this state, which have been open and in use as such and included in a road district in the town in which the same are respectively situated during twenty years next preceding the time when this article shall take effect, are hereby declared to be public roads or highways, and confirmed and established as such, whether the same have been lawfully laid out, established, and opened, or not.” Prior to the -enactment of this statute, highways by prescription were recognized, and there was a long and varied course of legislation upon the subject, which culminated in § 1050 of the Eevised Codes of 1895, which went into effect January 1, 1896, and which read: “All section lines are public highways -as far as practicable, and all existing high
Freedom from prescription can, it is true, be afterwards taken away, for no legislature can bind the hands of its successors in such matters. It cannot be taken away, however, by a retroactive statute, or in such a manner as to work a confiscation of property. “Highways by user,” says Mr. Justice Bartholomew, in the case of Walcott Twp. v. Skauge, supra, “are considered by the law to be based either upon original legal establishment or dedication, the continuous user for the period of twenty years being regarded as conclusive evidence either of an original legal establishment or of a dedication.” How, however, could a future legislature decree that a legal establishment or dedication should be presumed from the allowance of a use to the public, when, within the retroactive period of use prescribed by it, there was time when the statute absolutely negatived any theory of dedication and the obtaining by the public of highways by adverse user was disallowed ? The analogy between statutes of this kind and statutes of limitations is very close. “It is competent,” the authorities say, “for the legislature within certain limits, either by extending or reducing the period of limitation, to regulate the time within which even existing causes of action may be brought, but the power to enact such statutes is subject to the fundamental condition that a reasonable time shall be allowed for the exercise of the right of action, whether existing or prospective, after it comes within the prospective or present operation of the statute, and before the bar becomes effective.” 25 Cyc. 986. See also Merchants’ Nat. Bank v. Braithwaite, 7 N. D. 358, 66 Am. St. Rep. 653, 75 N. W. 244; Osborne v. Lindstrom, 9 N. D. 1, 46 L.R.A. 715, 81 Am. St. Rep. 516, 81 N. W. 72. It would seem that identically the same rule would apply in cases where a prescriptive