51 Minn. 381 | Minn. | 1892
The personal defendants in this case are sued for removing a fence on the land of plaintiff. Their justification is that the fence had been constructed by plaintiff across a highway, and that they, as supervisors of the town, removed it so far as it obstructed the highway. The only question is, was there a highway ? There was a verdict for plaintiff, which the court set aside. The court was right in this, though perhaps not upon the reasons it assigned. The motion for a new trial was on the grounds that the verdict was against evidence, and for errors of law occurring at the trial.
There was, evidence tending to show an uninterrupted user as a highway by the public for about twenty years before plaintiff constructed the fence, and the defendants offered in evidence records and files in the office of the town clerk, showing an attempt by the supervisors in 1866 to lay out a road under the statute. The attempt, as shown by the papers, was ineffectual, and on plaintiff’s objection they were excluded. The court instructed the jury that the evidence would not justify a finding that there was a highway by common-law dedication, or that there was a highway by prescription, which instructions were excepted to; and all that was left to the jury to determine was whether there was a highway by being used and kept in repair and worked as a highway for six years continuously, under 1878 G. S. ch. 13, § 47. The reasons given by the
The respondents argue that the papers were competent to support their claim of highway by prescription. But, conceding that a public highway may be established by prescription, we do not see how these papers could tend to establish it. Prescription presupposes a valid grant, and'the user by which it is proved is presumed to have been under such assumed grant. We cannot see how the presumption of a grant can be raised or strengthened by showing that the user' began, and probably continued, under void proceedings to acquire the public right without grant.
Whether a public highway may be established by prescription is not free from doubt. Prescription presupposing a grant, and to a grant a grantee competent to take being necessary, and the public at large not being competent to take as a grantee, it may be questioned that a public right may be acquired by prescription. But it is not necessary to determine the question in this case, for the same evidence that was introduced to prove a public highway by prescription equally tended to establish a highway by common-law dedication, and the defendants were entitled to a new trial for error in charging that the evidence would not justify a finding of such a dedication.
The appellant claims that section 47, above cited, supersedes the common-law rule as to dedication to public use as a highway. The section does not say so, and it is not inconsistent with the common-law rule. Under that rule, an intent to dedicate, and an act or acts indicating such intention, and an acceptance by the public, evidenced by user, or by some act of the proper authorities, constitute a dedication. These things being shown, no particular time is required to make it complete. It may become complete in a very short time. User by the public, without keeping in repair or working the highway, may establish an acceptance. The statute referred to is somewhat in the nature of a statute of limitations prescribing a time after which, under the conditions specified in it, to wit, using,
We can conceive of no reason why the court below held the evidence insufficient to justify a finding of a common-law dedication, unless it be that it was not expressly proved that the owner of the land knew of and assented to the use of the highway by the public. The intention to dedicate need not be expressed, and no particular act indicating such intention to the public is required. The intent may be gathered from conduct, and may be thus indicated to the public, so that they may be induced to act on it. Acquiescence, without objection, in the public use for a long time, is such conduct as proves and indicates to the public an intention to dedicate. As said in Case v. Favier, 12 Minn. 89, (Gil. 48:) “It is not necessary to establish a common-law dedication, to show an adverse, exclusive, and uninterrupted possession of the premises for twenty years with the actual or presumed knowledge of those adversely interested. The right of the public does not i-est upon a grant by deed, nor upon twenty years’ possession, but upon the use of the land, with the assent of the owner, for such a length of time that the public accommodation and private rights might be materially affected by the interruption of the enjoyment.” The knowledge and assent of the owner, whoever he may be, whether he is known or unknown, may be presumed from long-continued, uninterrupted use by the public, and the use might be for so long a period that his assent would be conclusively presumed. In Wilder v. City of St. Paul, 12 Minn. 192, (Gil. 116,) the court, after stating what is necessary to a common-law dedication, said: “This general rule should perhaps be stated with the qualification that, if the owner of the servient estate intentionally or by gross negligence leads the public to believe that he has dedicated the premises to public use, he will be estopped from contradicting his representations to the prejudice of those whom he may have misled.” The owner, if ignorant of the public user through his gross negligence, ought not to be allowed to avail himself of such ignorance to the prejudice of the public; and certainly the jury might find it gross neglect in an Owner of land to remain ignorant for
The papers offered and excluded would have proved nothing on the question of common-law dedication. They could not prove an intent to dedicate nor act of dedication on the part of the owner; and they could not prove an acceptance of a dedication on the part of the public, but only an attempt to secure a highway without regard to the consent of the owner.
Order affirmed.
(Opinion published 53 N. W. Rep. 703.)