85 Mass. 398 | Mass. | 1862
The injury which Mrs. Durgin received was on a way having a wrought carnage path and sidewalks, like an ordinary highway, and leading from Bridge Street, which was one of the public streets of Lowell, into Canal Street, which was a private way. It Was unobstructed at the entrance, and as open to public travel as any street in the city. But it had not been laid out or constructed by the public authorities. It was constructed by a manufacturing company, on their own land, and both sides of it were occupied by their tenements, built by them for the occupation of the people employed by them. Being in this condition, the public have used it, as often as they had occasion to do so, without objection. On one of the corner tenements a notice, “ Private way,” has been posted for a considerable time, but it does not appear when or by whom it was placed there.
The plaintiffs contend that the city of Lowell is liable to them for the injury occasioned to Mrs. Durgin by reason of a defect in this way, on the ground that it has become a highway either by dedication or prescription. The question is one of much practical importance, because so many manufacturing companies have ways of this description upon their own lands, which it is necessary for their own use and the use of their tenants to keep constantly open, and in such a condition that all persons who choose can use them freely. It would be an unreasonable burden to require them to keep gates or watchmen to prevent the public from travelling over these ways ; and if they did so, it would be extremely difficult for them to ascertain whether those who entered upon the ways did so as mere travellers or because they had business with the company or some of their tenants.
1. The first question is, whether this has become a public way by dedication. It was opened between 1836 and 1839; so that St. 1846, c. 203, which was passed to prevent the dedication of highways, does not apply to it.
2. We are of opinion that it has not become a public way by prescription. The presumption that the public use has been permissive, and not adverse, arises out of the circumstances above mentioned, and there is nothing in the case to rebut this presumption. It is suggested that the company should have done some act to interrupt the public travel and assert their private control, such for example as annually erecting a fence, and thus stopping the entrance for a short time, in order to prevent the prescriptive right from accruing. But such an act would be a burdensome formality, and would obstruct their own use of the road much more than it would obstruct the public use. And it would be unreasonable to hold that a proprietor ought to obstruct his own use of his private way, in order to prevent it from becoming a public way by prescription.
In Jennings v. Tisbury, 5 Gray, 74, Chief Justice Shaw remarks respecting the public use of a way, such as establishes a public prescriptive right, that, in general, it must be such as to warrant a presumption of laying out, dedication or appropriation by parties having authority to lay out, or a right to appropriate, like that of prescription or non-appearing grant in case of individuals. It stands upon the same legal grounds, a presumption that whatever was necessary to give the act legal effecl and operation was rightly done, although no other evidence of i-can now be produced except the actual enjoyment of the benefits conferred by it.
But in the present case it appears when and how and for what purpose the way was made, and the presumption of a lost record is excluded by the admission that the city never laid the way out.
The plaintiffs further contend that even if it remained a private
Exceptions overruled.