34 Mich. 512 | Mich. | 1876
Belitz brought an action of trespass on the case to recover special damages sustained by him on account of an alleged obstruction of a public highway by defendant.
There was evidence given on the part of the plaintiff tending to show that the road in question had been used as a highway for more than twenty years; that it was four rods wide up to 1863, when defendant fenced it in, leaving it less than twenty-six feet wide; that in 1866, and again in 1869, defendant drew and deposited stone in the road, which
The plaintiff claimed, and the court at his request charged, that if the jury should find the way in controversy was, on the 15th day of March, 1861, a road not recorded, and that the same had been used a period of ten years or more, then the same by force of the statute (§ 1268, G. L.) became and was a public highway. The force and effect of this instruction ivas, that a mere private way, used as such for a period of ten years, became by force of the statute a public highway. The statute cannot receive such a construction. The legislature never intended by • any so summary a process to convert private into public highways. This section has no relation to private ways. It applies to public" highways, and was designed to cure defects in the laying out and recording of the same where they had been used as a public highway the time fixed by the statute. It was not the intention that a private way, no matter how long it may have been used as such, should, upon the taking effect of this act, become public. No such radical change was intended.
We do not consider it necessary to discuss at length the
The judgment must be reversed, with costs, and a new trial granted.