90 P. 674 | Or. | 1907
Opinion by
1. It is unquestionably the settled law of this State that in actions of this character, while a witness may state the facts upon which the damage is predicated, he cannot give his opinion as to the amount of the damages resulting from a given act, because it is the exclusive provinces of the jury to ascertain from the facts given in evidence the amount of damages, under the rules of law given to them by the court: Burton v. Severance, 22 Or. 91 (29 Pac. 200); Chan Sing v. Portland, 37 Or. 68 (60 Pac. 718); United States v. McCann, 40 Or. 13 (66 Pac. 274); Pacific Live Stock Co. v. Murray, 45 Or. 103 (76 Pac. 1079). For this reason the court erred in permitting, over defendant’s objection, the pldintiff and witness Houser to give their opinion as to the amount of plaintiff’s damages ; but it does not necessarily follow that for that reason the judgment must be reversed. If it clearly appears from the record that the incompetent testimony admitted did not influence the verdict, it will not be cause for reversal: Heneky v. Smith, 10 Or. 349 (45 Am. Rep. 143); French v. Cresswell, 13 Or. 418 (11 Pac. 62); Strickland v. Geide, 31 Or. 373 (49 Pac. 982); 13 Cyc. 193.
The record discloses that the plaintiff claimed damages to the amount of $150, and after having testified about the condition of the crop, and the amount destroyed, and the value,
“We have noticed the exceptions taken to the admission of testimony regarding the amount of damages sustained by the respondent in consequent of the sheep feeding upon the land, and agree with the appellant's counsel that manjr of the questions asked the witness upon that subject were informal; but the verdict .was so small that we have concluded that the appellant could not have been materially injured on account of it. If the respondent was entitled to any verdict at all, she was certainly entitled to the amount recovered.”
3. Error is also assigned to the effect that all the witnesses, including plaintiff, were permitted to testify as to what was the value of the hay crop as if the same had been raised, harvested, and ready for use in feeding season, while it was alleged and admitted that the crop was- a growing crop, and that no allowance or deduction was made for the necessary expense and trouble of raising and harvesting the crop.
3. To support this contention, it is asserted that no testimony whatever was offered to show -how many tons of hay the crop would have made, if not injured, or what the cost of caring for and harvesting the same would have been. No testimony to that effect appears in the record, it is true; but the bill of
4. The defendant at the trial offered proof tending to show that, for several years prior to the entry and settlement by plaintiff and 'his lessor of the lands alleged to have been trespassed upon, and while the same were vacant, unappropriated public lands of the United States, the portion thereof over which defendants’ sheep passed had been used for a road or trail for -the passage of all kinds of- public travel, except wheeled vehicles; that it had been during all those years habitually and continuously used as a road over which passed persons on foot and on horseback, such as stockmen, ranchers, miners, prospectors, and in fact any and all persons who had occasion to travel in or through that - vicinity, especially stock raisers and drovers in driving large bands of stock, such as horses, cattle, and- sheep-, to and from the public ranges above and below those lands; tua-t said road or trail lies in a very deep, narrow, canyon, sometimes called a “box canyon,” through which runs the Imnaha River; that along the sides or bluffs o-f this canyon are high perpendicular cliffs or walls of rock, commonly called- “rim rock,” running parallel to the river, and which naturally confine the travel to the narrow bottoms and lower edges of the cliffs, and between the “rim rock” and the river; that it had been thus continuously used as such road by the general public long before 'and up to the time the lands alleged to- have been trespassed upon were entered or settled upon; that on account of the narrow space of ground upon which it was practicable to travel, the road or trail became a well-worn .and well-defined line of travel; that the road had been recognized as a public highway by the public and road authorities from the year 1896 to the time it was obstructed
In some places it was confined to one path or trail, on account of the proximity of the rim rocks to the river; while at other places, where there were small flats or bottoms, the line of travel would broaden out and cover almost all the level ground, which the testimony showed to be on those flats not more than 75 yards wide. Proof was also offered tending to show that the road ran right through the middle of those flats, and would take about all of them, not less than 60 feet in any place on those flats, but generally a great deal more, especially when a band of loose stock were driven along there, in which cases the stock would spread out and cover all the flats; that the travel on this road or trail was continuous, uninterrupted, and unobstructed until the fall of 1905, when plaintiff settled there and inclosed three of those little flats, by building wire fences connected with the rim rocks in such manner as to form a separate inclosure of each flat, and at the same time obstruct and inclose the road where it ran across each flat, and forced the travel to leave the old road and pass along a narrow passageway from 16 feet to 20 feet wide next to the bank of the river. Upon this testimony the court’s instructions were based. Defendant excepted to the words “long-continued user,” used by the court in its third instruction, which is as follows:
“But by Bev. Stat. U. S. § 2477 (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 1567), a right of way for the construction of highways is granted over public lands of the United States, and long-continued' user by the public is sufficient to establish that the Dnited States’ grant of the way has been accepted by the public.”
Defendant also excepted to the words “for a long period, viz., 10 years or more,” used by the court in the fourth instruction, which, in part, is as follows:
“And if you find that, while this land over which the trail
Based on these exceptions, error is assigned.
5. The act of Congress referred to by the court is.an express dedication of a right of wajr, and an acceptance of the grant, while the land is a part of the public domain, may be effected by public user alone, without any action on the part of the public highway authorities. When an acceptance thereof has once been made, the highway is legally established, and is thereafter a public easement upon the land, and subsequent entrymen and claimants take subject to such easement: Wallowa County v. Wade, 43 Or. 253 (72 Pac. 793); McRose v. Bottyer, 81 Cal. 122 (22 Pac. 393); Smith v. Mitchell, 21 Wash. 536 (58 Pac. 667); 75 Am. St. Rep. 858). When the general public enter upon public lands not reserved for public use, for the purpose of appropriating a definite portion thereof for a highway, or to lay out or construct a highway for public use they do so with the consent of the owner previously given by express dedication. Under such circumstances, the duration of the user is not material, so long as it is sufficient to clearly assert an intention on the part of the general public to make such appropriation; but when there is no express dedication, and user is relied upon to raise a presumption of dedication, the entry is presumed to be against the consent of the owner, and the duration of the user is then material. The law upon this question has been well stated as follows:
“Except when user is relied on to raise 'a presumption of dedication, the duration of the user is wholly immaterial. It is not necessary that such user should continue any definite length of time. * * While no dedication will be presumed from user alone, unless the user has been so long and so general that the'public convenience would be materially affected by its interruption, no such requirement applies strictly as to the user which constitutes the acceptance of a dedication otherwise established; it being only necessary that those who wouU
The court, when using, in the third instruction, the language to which objection is made, has not declared “long-continued user” essential to establishment of the highway; but the language of the instruction is “long-continued user by the public is sufficient,” which is undoubtedly correct.
6. And, when giving the fourth instruction, the court has not declared a user “for a long period, viz., 10 years or more,” necessary to the legal establishment of the highway ; but the court has said, in effect, that, if you find a user for that period of time, then such trail became a legal highway, and such is the law. The instructions were applicable to the testimony, for the record shows that the ui^controverted testimony was that the public had traveled along this route from prior to 1896, up to May, 1906, when the damage was done. But if it could be fairly said that the jury may have understood the court to have meant by these instructions that such long-continued user was necessary to the legal establishment of the highway, yet it is plainly manifested hy the verdict that they did not so interpret the instruction. They must have necessarily found that the highway claimed by the defendant did in fact exist, for the amount of their verdict is manifestly for the value of part only of the crop, that part not on the highway, otherwise the verdict must have been for a much larger amount. There was testimony that damage was done off of the track of the asserted highway, and the court also instructed the jury as follows:
“But even though you find that the trail is a legal highway, if you find that the defendant in so passing his sheep across plaintiff’s fields, at the points complained of, permitted his sheep to do any unnecessary damages—that is, damages off the trail that could 'have been reasonably avoided—then, still defendant would be liable for such unnecessary damages.”
In any event, therefore, neither of these instructions could have injured the defendant.
7. Objection was also> made by defendant to the following
8. While the extent of the user and the reasonable width of the highway is generally for the jury, we cannot say, under the facts of this ease, that it was reversible error for the court to fix sixty feet as the maximum width beyond which they could not
Not finding any reversible error in the record, it folloAvs that the judgment should be affirmed. Affirmed.