55 Neb. 670 | Neb. | 1898
Tbe plaintiff instituted this action in tbe district court of Burt county and prayed that defendants be restrained from threatened trespasses upon real property, and in the trial court was awarded a judgment for tbe relief asked. The defendants haye prosecuted an error proceeding to this court.
Tbe original petition declared against one of tbe defendants as a road overseer, and ,set forth that past acts and threatened ones bad been, and were to be, done by such party as such officer in the claimed performance of bis duties in and about the opening of a public road and its preparation and completion for travel. After tbe answers of tbe defendants had been filed, tbe plaintiff asked leave to amend tbe petition by eliminating all reference to the official position of the one defendant; also, all statements which indicated that acts done or threatened bad been or were to be done by such defendant in bis capacity as road overseer, or in tbe performance of the duties of his office. Tbe plaintiff was allowed to so amend the petition and defendants were given five days
After the inception of the introduction of evidence during the trial, the defendants objected to the reception of any evidence on the ground of the insufficiency of the amended petition. This objection -was overruled, which action of the trial court is the burden of one assignment of error to which our attention is challenged in the present examination of the litigation. The question of the sufficiency of the petition, or that there is not stated therein a cause of action, should ordinarily be raised and determined prior to the trial of the cause; and, where nut presented until that time, the petition will be liberally construed, and, if possible, sustained. (Roberts v. Taylor, 19 Neb. 184, 27 N. W. Rep. 87; Marvin, v. Weider, 31 Neb. 774, 48 N. W. Rep. 825; Johnston v. Spencer, 51 Neb. 198, 70 N. W. Rep. 982; 6 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 349.) Viewed and construed within the latitude of .presumptions allowed by the rule just stated, the amended petition in the case at bar stated a cause of action — a begun and threatened destruction of the plaintiff’s property for the use for which, or the character in -which, he held and enjoyed it, or rather his deprivation of it for such use and enjoyment — and the objection interposed was properly overruled. (White v. Flannigain, 1 Md. 525; Baltimore B. R. Co. v. Lee, 23 Atl. Rep. [Md.] 901; Schneider v. Brown, 24 Pac. Rep. [Cal.] 715.)
The defenses were that the real estate — a portion of a section-line and the land bordering on the one side thereof — was embraced within the limits of a public road, either established or ordered opened by the proper authorities, or acquired by continued or continuous use by the public, and that the acts performed and to be done, which consisted in the main in the removal of a fence which belonged to plaintiff, and grading and ditching, were necessary to fit the road for travel; that one of the defendants was a road overseer, and he and the others under his directions were but proceeding in the proper manner to open the road to the passage of travel.
Affirmed.