62 Wash. 398 | Wash. | 1911
Appeal from a judgment dismissing action Upon appellant’s refusal to plead further to an order sustaining a general demurrer to his complaint. The complaint set forth that appellant was the owner of certain déscribed Teal property in Kittitas county, and that Hans Hansen Was the owner of other described land, separated from appellant’s land by a county road sixty feet in width, the traveled portion of the road being in the center thereof, leaving a strip on each side not necessary for road purposes; that appellant required water for the proper cultivation of his lands, which he obtained from ditches and lands north of his land, some of which he conveyed to his land along the county road, outside of its traveled portion, part of which water was waste water from the Hansen land, which appellant had obtained permission to use, and Hansen had given his consent to the use of the road for the conveyance of this water to appellant’s land; that respondent, without authority from
The theory of the ruling, as we gather it from the briefs, was that appellant had not shown any special damage, nor-any license from the county commissioners to run the water along the road; that the complaint showed but a single past act, and appellant himself being a wrongdoer could not invoke the aid of the courts to prevent the acts of respondent.
It has become the settled rule of this court that the public has only an easement of use in a public street or highway, and that the fee rests in the abutting owner. Simons v. Wilson, 61 Wash. 574, 112 Pac. 653. Where this rule obtains, it is as well settled that the owner of the abutting property may make such use of the land within the highway as will not interfere with its use for public travel, and that it is a trespass against the owner of abutting property to make excavations in the highway, or otherwise disturb its use as a public highway. 15 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2d ed.), 416. The use which the abutting owner may make of the highway includes the right to maintain ditches or drains for the benefit of his lands; providing he maintains no nuisance in so doing, nor interferes with the use as a highway. Groton v. Haines, 36 N. H. 388; Woodring v. Forks Township, 28 Pa. St. 355, 70 Am. Dec. 134; Nelson v. Fehd, 203 Ill. 120, 67 N. E. 828; Dexter v. Riverside & Oswego Mills, 15 N. Y. Supp. 374; Thom v. Dodge County, 64 Neb. 845, 90 N. W. 763.
The complaint was good, as against a general demurrer. The judgment is for that reason reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to overrule the demurrer, and for further proceedings.
Dunbar, C. J., Chadwick, and Crow, JJ., concur.