169 Mo. App. 295 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
This is an appeal from an order of the court awarding plaintiff a new trial. Plain
It appears that about 1889 one Goetz was engaged in the line and cement business and Bruner in the granitoid business. Goetz and Bruner agreed to purchase four lots of ground in the city of St. Louis, which were adjacent, with a view of conducting the business of each on separate lots. In accordance with this agreement, they purchased lots 8, 9, 10 and 11 of a certain city block numbered 2211. By an arrangement between the parties, Bruner took title by deed to lots 8 and 9 and Goetz took title by deed to lots 10 and 11. By a further agreement, Bruner and Goetz constructed the switch involved here along the line between lot 9, which was owned by Bruner, and lot 10, which was owned by Goetz. Each party contributed pro rata to installing the switch along the line which divided their properties, and the major part thereof rested, one-half on Bruner’s property and the other half on that of Goetz. The switch connected with the Missouri Pacific Railroad tracks. It was agreed and understood that the switch should be used in common by Bruner and Goetz in connection with their respective business conducted on the separate lots owned by each, and
It appears defendant’s business has increased considerably during the period of time which elapsed, until, in recent years, it has employed the switch for setting in and out three or four cars per day. ‘When defendant sets in or takes out cars over this switch
After hearing the evidence, the court dismissed the bill and gave judgment for defendant, as though plaintiff’s business was not impaired and its rights were not infringed or interfered with through defendant’s use of the switch for the purpose of setting in and taking out cars quite beyond the original property contemplated in the agreement pertaining to the common switch. But the court concluded, and we believe properly so, that it erred in respect of this matter, and thereafter set the judgment aside and ordered a new trial of the issue.
On this appeal from the order awarding a new trial, it is first argued by defendant that the record is devoid of evidence tending to prove that the switch was originally installed to serve-the business of the parties located upon lots 8, 9,10 and 11 only, and therefore plaintiff’s suit must fail, for it is said, unless the agreement under which the switch was laid, restricted
Defendant did not deny this averment in its answer in any manner whatever. There is no general denial in the answer, but, on the contrary, it specifically admits that plaintiff has the right to the use of the switch mentioned in the petition and denies only
It appears that defendant’s business has considerably increased in volume in recent years, and, therefore, instead of setting one car a day upon the switch, it now passes in and out as many as four. These cars
But it is said that, though such be true, it appears defendant has acquired a prescriptive right through the long years of user of the switch since the' summer of 1891, in passing cars over the same and upon lots 22, 23, 24 and 25 beyond the alley. Defendant introduced no evidence whatever at the trial, and the prescriptive right from user must be found, if at all, in the evidence given for plaintiff. We discover nothing in the record to sustain this argument. In order to establish a prescriptive right there must appear, first, a user for a period at least equal to that of the Statute of Limitations in cases at law; second, that .the user was adverse; third, that it was under a claim of right; and, fourth, notice to the owner of the user and of its character and of the claim of right. A mere permissive use will not suffice. [Anthony v. Kennard Bldg. Co., 188 Mo. 704, 87 S. W. 921.] There can be no doubt that defendant and its predecessor have used the
If this were a case where defendant and its predecessor used the switch for all those years and plaintiff and its predecessor suffered it without making any use of the switch on their own part, the presumption would be.highly influential here. However this may be,, it is of slight importance in the circumstances attending the situation and the use, for it appears plaintiff and its predecessor used the switch all of the time in connection with its business. The use of defendant and its predecessor in passing, cars over the switch to the lots beyond the extent of the easement for many years did not interfere with plaintiff’s rights in the least, and it was therefore but neighborly to permit it. It appears to have been only recently that defendant’s business has expanded until the extra user or burden imposed by it upon plaintiff’s estate has become of such proportions as to materially interfere with its business. Because of tins, it is sought to revoke the permit theretofore enjoyed. It seems to be the generally accepted rule in cases such as this, where both the owner and another use the way and it appears that the use of the other person in no manner interferes with that of the owner or injures the road, that
There is not a suggestion in the record that defendant or its predecessor in title ever asserted any adverse claim of right with respect to the use of this switch, and the entire proposition depends upon the mere fact that it was permitted to use it at a time when such use in no manner interfered with the rights of plaintiff or its predecessor who was all of the time using the switch in its own business as well. Obviously the presumption of adverse user may not arise amid facts and circumstances thus appearing, for such facts and circumstances attending the use are sufficiently strong to repel it, in that they suggest a mere permission.
The court did not err in awarding plaintiff a new trial. The judgment should be affirmed and the cause