82 Wis. 99 | Wis. | 1892
The plaintiff claimed an easement or right of private way over a certain strip of defendant’s land, two rods in width, on several.grounds, namely: (1) That it had been laid out by the supervisors as a private road; (2) that his ancestor and grantor purchased and paid $50 for it to the predecessor in title of the defendant; (3) twenty years’ adverse user; and (4) ten years’ adverse user and claim of right under an order of the supervisors of the town laying it out as a private way or road,— and in his complaint he charged the defendant, in substance, with interrupting and disturbing him in its use and enjoy
The entire chapter (ch. 133, E. S.) relates only to “ actions of ejectment,” and by sec. 3073 “ actions for the recovery of specific real property, or the possession thereof, with damages for the withholding thereof, are styled ‘ actions of ejectment,’ and may be commenced and proceeded in as other civil actions are, except as hereinafter provided in this chapter.” After provisions in subsequent sections, directing what judgment shall be entered in the various cases, sec. 3092 provides, in substance, that “ the court in which any such judgment shall have been entered” may vacate 'the judgment and grant a' new trial, upon terms therein specified, as a matter of right. This right is expressly confined by the terms of the statute to actions of ejectment. The power of a court to set aside judgments for the purpose of granting new trials as of course is limited to judgments in such actions. The statute in question was originally taken from the New York statutes (2 R. S. N. Y. 309), and in Shumway v. Shumway, 42 N. Y. 143, it was said that it applied “ only to actions of ejectment, as the position of the section and its language clearly imported was its design. It was never applied to equitable actions, though they might and frequently did determine
The cause of action here is for disturbance in the enjoyment of an easement or right of way, and is concerning an incorporeal hereditament, which lies not in livery but in grant, and for which an action of ejectment cannot be maintained ; for the sheriff cannot deliver or put any one in possession of intangible property, such as an easement or mere right of way, on an habere facias possessionem. Godd. Easem. 3-5; Washb. Easem. 740; Racine v. Crotsenberg, 61 Wis. 481; Child v. Chappell, 9 N. Y. 246; Strong v. Brooklyn, 68 N. Y. 10. Although the judgment entered in this action may be conclusive on the question of right of way or easement claimed by the plaintiff, yet the court had no power to vacate it, and grant a new trial as of course, on
By the Court. — The order of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.