157 Iowa 210 | Iowa | 1912
— Tbe plaintiffs, Ford, King, and Van Lang-den, are the trustees of Liberty township; in Hamilton county, and Welp, the highway supervisor or road superintendent in and for said township and in this action, seek to enjoin the defendants from obstructing an alleged public highway between sections 22 and 23 thereof. It appears that E. D. Doolittle owned the N. W. % of section 23 and A. P. Doolittle the S. E. % of the same section. Since the beginning of the action the latter departed this life, and his sole heir, Electa F. Doolittle, was substituted ini his stead as party defendant. The defendant Schwandt owned the E. %-of the S. W. of section 15, and the E. % N. E.
In August, 1909, F. D. Doolittle, with the assistance Of E. L. .Doolittle and another, set the fence on the east side over to the center of the highway on the section line, and, upon being notified by an officer to discontinue its construction and remove the fence, completed it, and thereafter, on being interviewed by plaintiffs, refused to remove if, though expressing a willingness to bide any order which might be made by'the courts and this is the attitude of Schwandt, there being no doubt that, had the road supervisor removed the fence, these parties would have replaced it. Nothing had been done by the public on the road since 1894, and it -was included in a drainage district wherein the benefits to three miles of highway were assessed at $495.70. The evidence tends to show that the water from the pond or slough has been drained by the improvement and the road may now be worked, and also that F. D, Doolittle circulated a petition along in 1895 or 1896 “praying that the road be opened.” In this suit plaintiffs ask that defendants be required to remove the fence obstructing the highway, and enjoined from interposing like future
than ten years, title was not acquired thereto by adverse possession. Rae v. Miller, 99 Iowa, 650. Biglow v. Ritter, 131 Iowa, 213; McElroy v. Hite, 154 Iowa, 453.
But a highway may be so occupied by the abutting owner that the public will be estopped from claiming it. Davies v. Huebner, 45 Iowa, 575; Orr v. O’Brien, 77 Iowa, 253; Smith v. Gorrell, 81 Iowa, 218; Rector v. Christy, 114 Iowa, 475. In the first three of these decisions, the portions of the highway in dispute had never been traveled.-' In Rector v. Christy, the road was changed in location and a portion of the former highway, not in the new location and not in the line of travel, was included in the field of the abutting owner for a period of more than ten years, and the public was held to have abandoned it. In Heller v. Cahill, 138 Iowa, 301, and Lucas v. Payne, 141 Iowa, 592, also relied on by appellant, the public had never used the road. In the case at bar the highway had been opened, and, though there was a slough or pond near the center north and south, it was graded through this in 1884-, again in 1894, and was continuously traveled by the public until 1896. Thereafter travel practically ceased, probably owing to the marsh mentioned, but the fences which had been, constructed on each side in 1884 were not disturbed -.until
This being so, there was ground for enjoining interference on their part. The decree was right, and it is,— Affirmed.