Opinion
Thе defendants Briggs have appealed from a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs Frahm wherein it was adjudged that the plaintiffs have an easement consisting of a right of way over a concrete road, which is mainly on the defendants’ premises, for use for vehicular and pedestrian traffic and for ingress to and egress from the plaintiffs’ premises. It was *443 further decreed that the defendants and their successors in interest were permanently enjoined from erecting any fence, wall or other barrier so as to close or prevent the use of the road by the plaintiffs or their successors in interest. The judgment contained other provisions tо which reference is unnecessary at this time.
The defendants Briggs had demanded a jury trial. But on the court’s own motion prior to the taking of evidence the jury was ordered discharged on the ground that a trial by jury was not prоper because the cause was solely one in equity. At the time counsel for the defendants Briggs noted in substance an exception to that ruling as being a violation of his clients’ constitutional right. The first contentiоn presented on this appeal is that the defendants Briggs were thereby deprived of their constitutional right to trial by jury and therefore the judgment must be reversed.
In setting forth the issues as presented by the pleadings, no reference will be made to allegations relating to the theory of an agreed boundary or the theory of a right of way by necessity since the plaintiffs abandoned those theories at the trial. Moreover, thе plaintiffs did not press any claim for damages.
In the first cause of action contained in the complaint, portions of the allegations of the plaintiffs Frahm were as follows: “That said roadway is a privatе paved road or street which is located along the boundary line of the properties of plaintiffs and defendants. The plaintiffs and their predecessors have occupied and used said roadwаy as a means of ingress and egress to and from the beach portion of their property for more than eight (8) years prior to the construction and use of a certain fence and gate hereinaftеr mentioned. The said possession by plaintiffs and by their predecessors has at times [szc] been actual, open, notorious, hostile, exclusive, continuous, adverse and under claim of right. The plaintiffs and their predecessors are the owners of an easement in said roadway acquired by their adverse possession thereof. . . . That on or about and during the month of April of 1965 defendants fenced off and locked all gates, thereby cutting off plaintiffs access by means of said roadway to their beach property and to one of the buildings located thereon.”
In their fourth cause of action the plaintiffs alleged: “That uр to April of 1965 defendants and their predecessors acquiesced in the use of said roadway by plaintiffs and, in fact, represented to plaintiffs that they recognized their claim of right to the use of said roadway for ingress and egress. In reliance upon said acquiescence and representations, plaintiffs purchased the aforementioned property and improved, modernized, and leased the imprоvements found thereon.”
*444 In their answer the defendants Briggs denied “that plaintiffs or their predecessors have ever occupied or possessed said road as therein alleged, or at all, for the periоd therein alleged, or at all, and deny that any act of plaintiffs or their predecessors alleged to be possessive or otherwise has ever been actual or open or notorious or hostilе or exclusive or continuous or adverse or under claim of right. Deny that plaintiffs or their predecessors were or are the owners of an easement in said concrete road either as therein alleged or at all.”
With respect to the fourth cause of action a portion of the answer of the defendants Briggs was that they denied “that at the time therein alleged or at all defendants or their predеcessors acquiesced in the alleged use of said concrete road by plaintiffs except for the occassional [ízc] permissive use hereinabove alleged, and deny that they or any of thеm represented to plaintiffs or any of them that they recognized said alleged claim of right to the use of the concrete road for the purposes therein alleged, or at all.” They further denied “that plaintiffs relied upon any alleged acquiescence or alleged representations of these defendants in any act they may have done.”
The transcript of the trial discloses that there was a substаntial conflict in the evidence with respect to the issues which have been noted.
In
People
v.
One 1941 Chevrolet Coupe,
*445
An easement is an incorporeal right which entitles its owner to use or enjoy another’s land. (17 Cal.Jur.2d, Rev., Easements, § 2, p. 121.) With respect to the establishment of an easement as a condition precedent to the granting of equitable relief, the law has been expressed as follows: “If a complainant’s right to an easement is clear, it is not necessary that it be first established before equity will grant reliеf. If, however, his right to an easement is involved in substantial dispute, no injunction will be granted until the claim has been established at law.” (25 Am.Jur.2d, Easements and Licenses, § 121, p. 524; see 28 C.J.S., Easements, § 107, p. 790; Note,
As stated in
Robinson
v.
Puls,
In
LeDeit
v.
Ehlert,
The determination expressed hereinabove as to the right to triаl by jury as to the issue of the existence of a prescriptive easement requires a reversal of the judgment in spite of the plaintiffs’ argument that the trial court “found judgment on the basis of an easement by estoppel in addition to the ground of prescription” and that, consequently, the defendants Briggs “are not prejudiced by the denial of a jury trial should any legal issues be found, as this is an addition [szc] equitable ground upon which to base the trial court’s decision.” Whether there was conduct on the part of the defendants Briggs or anyone in privity with them which constituted an estoppel was an issue of fact to be submitted to the jury in a trial by jury.
2
(Hudson
v.
Morgan & Peacock Properties Co.,
The judgment is reversed.
Schweitzer, J., and Allport, J., concurred.
Notes
In Bouvier’s Lаw Dictionary (Rawle’s Revision 1914) it is stated (p. 129) under the heading of “Action on the case”: “This was a remedy given by the common law, but it appears to have existed only in a limited form and to a certain extent until the statutе of Westminster 2d. In its most comprehensive signification it includes
assumpsit
as well as an action in form
ex delicto;
at present when it is mentioned it is usually understood to mean an action in form
ex delicto."
Under “Case” Bouvier states (p. 425) that the action lies for
“Torts committed forcibly
where the matter affected was
not
tangible; ... as for obstructing а private way; Lambert v. Hoke, 14 Johns. (N.Y.) 383; Wright v. Freeman. 5 Harr. & J. (Md.) 467; Cushing v. Adams, 18 Pick. (Mass.) 110; Osborne v. Butcher,
That this view is not of recent origin is evident from the following statement in Bouvier’s Law Dictionary (Rawle’s Revision 1914) at page 1082: “The doctrine of estoppel
in pais
is applied at law as well as in equity; Dickerson v. Colgrove,
