— This action was brought by the respondent against the appellant corporation to recover $2,000 damages, alleged to have been sustained because of the appellant’s acts in temporarily blockading a certain logging road which crossed the appellant’s railroad track in Kootenai county, and over which railroad track and crossing the respondent was hauling logs. The answer put in issue the main allegations of the complaint. The cause was tried by the court with a jury, and a verdict and judgment was rendered and entered in favor of the respondent for $1,500. This appeal is from the order denying a new trial.
There are many of the early decisions in California that are very technical upon the point under consideration, but the more recent decisions are more liberal and have overruled some of the earlier cases. The case of De Molera v. Martin, 120 Cal. 548, 52 Pac. 825, is cited in support of respondent’s contention, but that case is expressly overruled in Drafhman v. Cohen, 139 Cal. 310, 73 Pac. 181, decided June 25, 1903. Referring to the former case the court said: “If the decision in that case were followed, perhaps the specifications here in question would be declared insufficient; but experience has proven that the rule as there laid down was too strict, and that it has been productive of evil and not good; .... but latterly the court has been more liberal in such matters, and the rule now followed is stated in American etc. Co. v. Packer, 130 Cal. 459, 62 Pac. 744, as follows: ‘Whenever there is a reasonably successful effort to state the particulars, and they are such as may have been sufficient to inform the opposing counsel and the court of the grounds, and the trial court has entertained and passed upon the motion, .... this court ought not to refuse to consider the case on appeal, and especially where, as in this case, the transcript shows that all the evidence has been brought up.’ ” (See Swift v. Occidental M. & P. Co., 141 Cal. 168, 74 Pac. 700.) In that case the court said: “The substance of all these decisions is that the
It appears from the record that the appellant corporation owned and operated a transcontinental railway line with a right of way four hundred feet wide, two hundred feet on each side of the center of the track, which railway crossed Kootenai county. It appears that the respondent had contracted with the Humbird Lumber Company for cutting and hauling sawlogs and other timber at $4.50 per thousand feet, and that he constructed a logging road for the purpose of hauling said timber to Lake Pend O’Eeille. This logging road crossed over the line of appellant’s railroad within the confines of the northwest quarter of section 4, township 7 north, range 1 east, Kootenai county. The railroad, at a point where said logging road crossed it, was on a fill or embankment about one and one-half or two feet high. During the summer of 1903, the appellant corporation found it necessary to make a change in the location of its line of rail
Section 851 of the Revised Statutes, as amended, provides that roads laid out and recorded as highways by order of the board of commissioners, and all roads used as such for a period of five years, provided the latter shall have been worked and kept up at the expense of the public, or located and recorded by order of the board of commissioners, are highways. The evidence clearly shows that the road in question has not been used by the general public for five years, and it is nowhere shown that it was worked and kept up at the expense of the public, or that it was located and recorded by order of the board of commissioners or dedicated to the public. The evidence shows that it was constructed and kept in repair by the respondent, and that he maintained a gate across the same against the positive prohibition of the law if it was a public road. It is clear to us from the entire record that the road in question was not a public highway, and for that reason the respondent is not entitled to recover in