49 Neb. 42 | Neb. | 1896
This is an appeal from a decree of the district court for Dakota county dismissing the petition of the plaintiff, who, as overseer of highways, seeks to restrain the defendant from the threatened obstruction of a certain alleged public road within the plaintiff’s district. The defendant for answer alleges that he is the owner, in his own light, of the premises described, and admits the building of a fence as charged at the point in question, but denies the existence of a public road upon his said premises. He also pleads as a defense a former judgment, to which extended reference will hereafter be made. The reply puts in issue all allegations of new matter contained in the answer.
It is shown by the evidence in the record that in the year 1885 one Lars O’Chander, defendant’s immediate grantor, was the owner in his own right of the premises described in the petition, to-wit, the south half of the northeast quarter of section 28, township 27, range 8 east, in Dakota county, and also of the southeast quarter of section 29, in said township; that in the month of July of said year one Barnes, a predecessor of the plaintiff, in the office of overseer of highways, claiming the existence of a public road over and upon the premises above described, and in the exercise of his authority as such overseer, cut down and removed a fence before that time
“Comes now the defendant and for answer to plaintiff’s petition filed herein states: That he denies each and every allegation therein contained except such as are hereinafter admitted or otherwise answered; that as to whéther plaintiff is the owner of the real estate in said petition described defendant has neither knowledge nor information sufficient to form a belief, and defendant states the fact to be that there is running through said real estate a public highway or road, and further, that plaintiff is estopped from denying that the same is a lawful public highway or road for the reason that the said plaintiff has received the sum of $100 as damages from the said county for land taken in the establishment of said highway; and for the further reason that plaintiff in the year 1882 or 1883 petitioned the board of county commissioners of said county for a resurvey of said highway, which said resurvey was duly ordered by said board and carried out; that the defendant is the supervisor of highways for the district in which said real estate and*46 road are located; that on the 30th day of July, 1885,. plaintiff had obstructed the said highway by building a wire fence across and in the same, and that on said day this defendant, finding the said highway so obstructed and acting as such road supervisor, removed such obstruction by cutting the said fence, and thereby opened said highway for travel.”
The foregoing allegations having been put in issue by a general denial, there was a trial to a jury, at the conclusion of which a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff for nominal damage in obedience to the following peremptory direction of the court, and upon which judgment was subsequently entered:
“1. Plaintiff brings this action to recover damages for trespass upon his land and injury to his fence, alleged to have been committed on July 30, 1885. Defendant admits the removal of the fence and justifies his acts by i’eason of the fact that he is and was road supervisor and as such removed the fence, which he claims was upon the public highway and obstructed travel.
“2. You are instructed that there is no testimony before you establishing a public road over and across the land where the fence was situated, and the only question for you to determine is the amount of damages plaintiff has sustained by reason of the removal of the fence.
“3. You should assess plaintiff such damages as he has-shown himself entitled to by a fair preponderance to be entitled to, and find a verdict accordingly.”
There is also evidence, tending to prove the acquiescence by the county in the result stated by the abandoning of its claim respecting said road and the removal of' a bridge before that time erected on the line thereof. Counsel for plaintiff, however, insist that that judgment is not a bar to this action, because (1) the locus in quoherein differs from that involved in the former suit; (2) there is no privity between this plaintiff and his prede1cessor in office, Barnes.
To the first contention it is a sufficient answer that the-
Preliminary to an examination of the second proposition it may be observed that there can be no doubt of the privity between the defendant herein and his grantor, Lars O’Chander. Privity in its broadest sense denotes the mutual or successive relationship to the same right of property. (Bouvier’s Law Dictionary; 2 Greenleaf, Evidence, sec. 189; 1 Herman, Estoppel, p. 149.) The defendant, therefore, as grantee of the property described, by deed from the said Lars O’Ohander subsequent to the judgment in the former suit, is in a position to assert whatever rights, if'any, accrued to the latter thereunder. This observation leads to the second and principal ground of contention, viz., the relation of the plaintiff herein in his representative capacity as overseer of highways to his predecessor, Barnes, in the former action. It is conceded that a single recovery for trespass would not in every case work an estoppel as against the rights of the public. But we are, on principle, unable to perceive that the attitude of the plaintiff in the prosecution of this action differs essentially from that of his predecessor in the assertion by the latter of the identical claim. If he has any standing as a party to this proceeding, — a proposition strongly controverted, — it is by reason of his duty with respect to the highways of his district and the fact that in the discharge of such duty he stands as the representative of the public at large. To demonstrate the foregoing proposition it is only necessary to inquire
Decree affirmed.