180 Iowa 1276 | Iowa | 1917
The trial court, upon hearing the testimony, found the issues in plaintiffs’ favor, and defendants appeal.
In argument to this court, the appellees concede, for the purposes of the present case, that, if the record sufficiently shows the fact that the highway in question was ever established in the manner required by statute, and that plaintiffs have by their fences or otherwise encroached thereon, then mere lapse of time would not deprive the proper officers of the right to proceed to open or to improve such highway upon its true location as shown by the proper record. They contend, however, that, even if it be conceded that the county court making the order of establishment had full jurisdiction in the premises, the described location is not shown and cannot be retraced with accuracy or exactness, and that the use and general recognition of the road in its present location should be held conclusive upon that question. Were the only objection to the defendants’ right to move the road fences out of their present location the failure of the record to show what kind of notice was given of the presentation of the road petition, we should hesitate very much at this late day to hold that the action thereon was void. Such a precedent would cast doubt upon the legal character of a very large part of the roads established in the early history of the state, when, as a rule, all such business was done and records were made with much informality. But there are other and sufficient reasons for sustaining the judgment below. It satisfactorily appears that, if an engineer were to attempt to retrace the lines
The use and maintenance of the highway substantially as it now exists were begun at or soon after the date of the order of establishment, at a time when the public understanding of its true intended location ought not to have been far astray. It is a matter of common knowledge that at that time section corners, as shoAvn by the marks and monuments of the government survey, Avere as a rule still plainly visible, and the public usage of the road dating from that time constitutes valuable evidence of the correctness of the location, even though it should be held not to afford ground for application of the statute of limitations. The cases relied upon by the appellants which affirm the general rule as to the continuance of the public right in the streets and highways, notAvithstanding long periods of disuse, need not be questioned nor their soundness denied; but it does not folloAv that every resurvey after long intervals of time is to be accepted as correct, and all highways affected thereby are to be moved to correspond to the latest conclusions of the civil engineer. If such were the case,
In view of all the evidence, we think the court properly granted the relief asked for by the plaintiffs. We reach this conclusion, not on the theory that the county court was without jurisdiction to establish the highways, but rather that, taking the record as a whole, it sufficiently shows that the highway as used is substantially upon the location contemplated in the order of establishment.
Some question is suggested in argument that the road as fenced is less than its proper width, but nothing in this decision or opinion is to be taken as a denial of the right of the road officers to compel the opening of the road to the legal width. The proper location of the roád, and not its width, is the only matter put in issue by the pleadings, and the only question we have undertaken to consider.
It is also argued for appellants that, as their acts in the premises have been performed in their official capacity only, they ought not to be charged personally with the costs. But the acts enjoined in the decree are such only as amount to a trespass on plaintiffs’ property, and the official station of one who commits or threatens to commit a trespass is never held to relieve him from liability therefor. It may also be said in this case that no motion was made in the trial
The decree of the trial court is — Affirmed.