145 Mo. 462 | Mo. | 1898
This is an injunctive proceeding by plaintiffs against defendant to restrain him from obstructing a neighborhood road.
In 1885 and prior thereto, plaintiffs and defendant resided in the same neighborhood in Buchanan county, Missouri, and having no other means of egress from and ingress to his premises Cook claims to have purchased from the defendant Ferbert, to be used by himself and co-plaintiffs as a road or way of travel north and south, a strip of ground ten feet wide off of the west side of Ferbert’s land. The consideration to be paid for this strip or roadway, was the erection of a fence on the east line thereof, of mulberry posts and
No deed was ever made, although frequently demanded.
The court made a special finding of facts substantially as herein stated and entered a judgment and decree enjoining and restraining defendant, his servants, agents and employees, from obstructing or in any way interfering with said strip of ground by said Cook as a road or right of way, and for costs. Defendant appealed;
The first question, lying at the threshold of this litigation, is, whether the strip of land used by plaintiffs and others as a roadway and fenced by Cook, was purchased by him from defendant, or whether it was merely the purchase of the right to use the strip as a roadway during an indefinite time.
If Cook bought the strip of land to be used by himself and others as a roadway they had the right to its use for that exclusive purpose and any interference by defendant with that use by fencing and putting a gate across it, and then locking the gate was an injury to them. If plaintiffs were entitled to a right of way over the strip of land, “then anything erected therein which, for practical purposes, made its useless convenient and 'beneficial than before, was an obstruction
In such circumstances the injured party has no adequate remedy at law and injunction is the proper remedy. Lakenan, Ex’r v. Railroad, 36 Mo. App. 363; Devore v. Ellis et al., 62 Iowa, 505; Collins v. Slade, 23 W. R. 199; McCann v. Day, 57 Ill. 101. But unless Cook bought the fee to the land, and sufficiently complied with the terms of the contract of purchase to take the case out of the statute of frauds, his right to use the strip as a roadway was that of a mere license which was revocable at the pleasure of the licensor Ferbert, and injunction will not lie in his favor. The court found that Cook purchased the land, but we are unable to concur in that view. The weight of the evidence is we think to the contrary, and that defendant only gave to him and others, and to him especially, a license to use the strip in question as a private road, for an indefinite time upon the consideration that he would fence it with mulberry posts and wire. Cook wanted this road for an outlet until he could obtain one by a public road which it seems he had accomplished at the time of placing the obstruction by defendant in the road in question.
Defendant never made a deed to the land, and in fact it does not seem that such a thing was contemplated by the parties at the time the arrangement was made by which Cook was to have the use of the strip for a private road.
The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded to be proceeded with according 'to the views herein ■expressed.