116 S.E. 84 | N.C. | 1923
The plaintiff, alleging an easement, seeks to drain the water from certain basins on his land across the lands of defendant and into defendant's canal. The defendant denied that the plaintiff had such easement or the right to drain across his land into the canal.
The court charged the jury: "Both sides have tendered issues, and I have selected form both, but I confess that I am doubtful whether they are proper ones or not."
In Snowden v. Bell,
An examination of the record and the exceptions show that this essential element whether the use of the asserted right was adverse was not submitted to the jury. The issue submitted was, "Has said ditch existed and been kept up continuously for draining plaintiff's land for the past 30 years over the land of the defendant?"; and the court erred in rejecting the issue which the defendant tendered as follows: "Is the plaintiff entitled to drain the water from his land through the ditch over the defendant's land and in to the canal across defendant's land, as alleged in the complaint?" An affirmative answer to this rejected issue, submitted under proper instructions, would have established the easement. An affirmative answer to the issue submitted does not do so. No right or easement is established thereby; nothing is concluded. Issues must necessarily conclude the matter; nothing must be left to conjecture.
Conceding that the ditch had existed and been kept up continuously for draining plaintiff's land for the past 30 years over the land of the defendant, the plaintiff would not have acquired the right of easement thereby. This user may have been permissive, and the law presumes *84
that it was. Mere user for 30 years will not confer an easement unless it appears that it was adverse. Snowden v. Bell, supra, and cases cited therein. Boyden v. Achenbach,
If the defendant had submitted to the issue as given and raised no objection, he would be estopped to object to its wording, but he did object to the issue as submitted by the court, and tendered the court the correct issue, which was rejected, and excepted. For this error there must be a
New trial.
Cited: Wallace v. Bellamy,