Aрpellant is the owner of the west 25' acres of NW% of FW]4 of Section 30, Township 4 South, Range 17 West. Approximately 900 feet north of her said land there is a public highway which runs in an easterly and westerly direction. Appellees own the land lying between said highway and appellant’s land, having acquired the same from Lamont Rowland in 1941. Appellant brought suit and prayed for a decree establishing by prescription an easement in her favor for a passageway across appellees’ said land along the route of a recognized old settlement road which leads from appellant's home to the public highway. She further prayed for a mandatory injunction to compel appellees to restore said road to a passable condition by removing gates across said settlement road on the north and south lines of appellees’ land and by leveling off and grading down certain terrace rows which appellees had constructed across said settlement road, or, in the alternative, that appellant be authorized to restore said road and charge the cost thereof to appellees with a lien on their land to secure payment of such cost. She further prayed for damages occasioned by the erection of said gates and the construction of said terrace rows and for an injunction restraining appellees frоm obstructing, fencing, plowing up or damaging said settlement road in the future, and for general relief. After conclusion of the evidence the Chancellor adjudged and decreed “that complainant herein be allowed to use the passageway across the lands of defendants, which she now uses across the said defendants’ land, so long as complainant keeps the gates shut so that stock cannot enter or depart into or from the lands of the defendants, and that all
There is no substantial dispute in the evidence. It shows that appellant has used the road across appellees’ land for the past 30 or 35 years without question or dispute or interference until the events hereinafter related. Before the prevalent use of automobiles it was used with animal-drawn vehicles, even prior to the time when Mr. Rowland acquired the land. About 1931 or 1932 Mr. Rowland planted the land in tung trees; in so doing he did not plant any trees in thе road but left it open for use by appellant; in 1941 he sold the property to appellees. Mr. Shaw fenced the land, according to his testimony, “several years later”, but no witness was able to fix the exact year. It is reasonably established, however, that it was less than four yеars prior to the trial. G-ates were installed across the road at both places where it crossed Shaw’s line. Mr. Shaw entered upon the roadway with a bulldozer and pushed up terraces running across the road; they are variously estimated as being from 18 inches to 3 or 3% feеt high; one of the witnesses for appellees said they were from 2 to 2% feet high. The road was thereby rendered completely impassable in rainy weather and' virtually impassable even in dry weather. Since construction of the terraces only two vehicles have been shown to have traveled it, one being a Jeep and the other a truck of some kind. Appellant
It has been held in this state that an easement for a рassage-way over the lands of another may be acquired by the use of such passage-way and the assertion of such right for a period of more than ten years. University of Mississippi v. Gotten,
It was held in the Gotten case, supra, that the University had the right to erect gates across the passage-way ; this was based upon a finding that the erection
In the Gotten case, supra, a lock was put on the gate and his wife was furnished with a key thereto. In this case Mr. Shaw testified that at times he had put a lock on the gates here in question; there was also testimony that the gates had been nailed up at times, though he denied knowledge of that. Mrs Lindsey’s home, as heretofore pointed out, is about one-fourth of a mile from the public highway. A tung orchard with trees about eighteen years .old lies between her home and the highway. According to the plat here in evidence the passage-way through the tung orchard is not perfectly straight. Consequently it is impossible for Mrs. Lindsey to know when some member of her family or some friend or neighbor desires to use this passage-way, and in our opinion the maintenance оf locks on these gates is an unreasonable burden upon the easement which she owns. As was said in the Gotten case “the facts of each case should control. ’ ’
The decree hereinabove quoted is in our opinion entirely too broad in imposing upon appellant the absolute and unqualified obligation to keep the gates closed at all times regardless of circumstances. In the Gotten case Mrs. Gotten was held responsible for keeping the gate closed “when any of Gotten’s people passed through
The evidence also shows that the tung trees by the side of the roadway have grown to such size that the branches thereof overhang- the roadway and seriously interfere not only with travel but even with persons walking along the roadway, and, as heretofore stated, the roadway is almost completely obstructed by the high terrace rows constructed by appellees. These obstructions render the easement practically useless and constitute an unreasonable interference with the rights of the owner of the dominant estate. They were created by the owner of the servient estate and render him not only liable in damages but also subject to injunctive relief. 17 Am. Jur., Easements, Secs. 114, 151, 152, and 153. Such an obstruction constitutes a private nuisance and the owner of the easement is even authorized to take the law into his own hands and remove the obstruction without thereby becoming a trespasser, provided he is able to do so without provoking a breach of the peace. 17 Am. Jur., Easements, Sec. 119. The owner of a prescriptive easement, however, cannot extend it beyond the actual user nor beyond such width as is reasonably necessary for the purpose for which it was created or acquired. 17 Am. Jur., Easements, Sec. 105. Furthermore, in this case appellant is the
In situations such as here presented the rights, privileges, duties and obligations of the several parties are reciprocal. Where a private right of way exists, the owners of the dominant аnd servient tenements must each use the way in such a manner as not to interfere with one another’s utilization thereof. Feld v. Young Men’s Hebrew Ass’n.,
We find no authority for assessment of the court costs against appellant under the facts of this case. Reinecke v. Gibbs,
The decree of the lower court is accordingly affirmed insofar as it grants to appellant the right to use the said passage-way across the lands of appellees, but it is modified to thе extent that she is not required to leave it as it now is but is entitled to have it opened at the expense of appellees by removing the said terrace and tree obstruc
Modified and affirmed in part, and in part reversed and decree here.
