235 P. 561 | Colo. | 1925
THE plaintiff in error was plaintiff below and was defeated in an action to obtain an injunction to restrain defendants from interfering with his ditch across their land over which he claimed a right of way. He brings error.
If he had a right of way injunction is the proper remedy.Koch v. Story,
Defendants claim plaintiff has no equity because his injury is not irreparable, and that the injury is not irreparable because he might build a ditch the other side of the fence on his own land. We know of no rule that one may not have a right of way over his neighbor's land even though he might with equal convenience use his own land. True, if he may as well use his own land yet he perhaps cannot condemn another's, but even though he may with equal convenience use his own land yet he may purchase and hold a right of way over his neighbor's. If, therefore, he has such a right of way, to deprive him of it is to deprive him of property and he is damaged. To take or destroy one's real property is always regarded as an irreparable injury. He must pay for a new ditch and give space for it on his own land.
Defendants, however, say that the cost of the new ditch would be but a trifle and they invoke the maxim de minimisnon curat lex. That maxim does not apply to the case of positive and wrongful invasion of another's property. 18 C. J. 481. One might as well say that he may knock down my garden fence because it isn't a very good one and I can make another for $3.
The defendants say, however, that no right of way was shown by the evidence, because, while the right claimed was based solely on use, the use was shown by plaintiff's own evidence to have been merely permissive *259
and therefore not a sufficient basis for a prescriptive or any irrevocable right. But the right is not based solely on use, it is based on the implied grant resulting from the construction and maintenance of the ditch with the knowledge of and without interference by the defendant's grantors. They cite Horne v. Hopper,
The defendants claim that the evidence shows no right, because the water was not used on the land on which the plaintiff claimed to have used it. The place where it was used was immaterial. If it was used that is enough. There is evidence that the ditch had been in its present position for but a short time, but it is shown to have been moved thither by agreement between the parties. This strengthens rather than weakens plaintiff's case.
Judgment reversed. *260
MR. JUSTICE ALLEN sitting for MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TELLER and MR. JUSTICE WHITFORD concur.