48 W. Va. 502 | W. Va. | 1900
Harriet L. Shaver brought an action of trespass on the case against Thomas B. Edgell in the circuit court of Harrison County to recover damages for trespass by entry on the land of the plaintiff,, in which a jury found one cent damages for the plaintiff subject to a demurrer by the plaintiff to the defendant’s evidence, which demurrer the court decided in favor of the plaintiff, and rendered judgment for the plaintiff. The defendant filed pleas setting up that he was justified in entering the plaintiff’s close by reason of a right of way vested in him. The defendant sued out this writ of error. '
The defendant makes the point that there is no formal demurrer to evidence, because the evidence is not set out and a formal joinder signed by the parties to the demurrer. All the evidence is stated, and the record states that the plaintiff demurred to the defendant’s evidence, and that the defendant joined in such demurrer. Court and parties treated this demurrer as good. Everything necessary to the decision of the case fully appears in the record, and a mere formal joinder signed by the parties would not add a jot or tittle to enable the court to better decide the law of the case upon the facts, and we cannot reverse the judgment upon such unsubstantial ground.
The defendant'Edgell would excuse himself from liability on the claim that his son, not himself, did the act of trespass. That act consisted in breaking down the bars in the enclosure of the plaintiff’s land and driving a wagon over her land. The evidence makes it plain beyond dispute, even from Edgell’s own evidence,
Edgell would justify the act on the claim that he had a lawful private right of way through those bars over that land. He bases this right of way on several grounds. First. He says that in the partition of a tract of two hundred and thirty-five acres of land owned by John Robinson at his death, lot Ho. 1 was assigned to the widow of Robinson, and that the decree of partition provided that “the holders of lots numbers one, six and ten do take and hold them, subject to right of the owners of lots numbers seven, eight and nine to erect, or cause to be erected, a gateway across said first named lots as shown by the blue lines on the plat returned;” and that he had a right of passage under that decree.. Edgell owns lot number ten in that partition.
Second. But Edgell would base his right of way on the claim that this way was by public use for over ten years made a public highway. The evidence fails utterly to show this. The most serious burden to which a man’s ownership of land can be subjected is that of a public highway. In such case the public is his master, and it requires evidence full, clear and explicit that shall thus deprive an owner of his exclusive use of his property. The burden is upon Edgell to furnish, such evidence as is required in such a case. He has not furnished it. Tested by the evidence adduced in his behalf it is shown that while John Bobinson lived on lot number Jone, there was a pathway- from the bars to his house, and running on, perhaps, up the run over his land to houses of his children living on the land. It was a road made by an owner on his own land, for his own use. The witnesses are explicit in declaring that it was never a public road. After Robinson’s death, while Edgell and Hall owned lot number one, they used this road, or rather path, for the use of their land, as they had the right to do. All that can be said from the evidence tending at all to show a public road is, that some times, and but seldom, neighbors would ride up this path running up the run, and thence cross over the steep hill to go to church over on Elk creek. It was thus used not at all regularly, and by only a few persons, and only for horseback riding or foot passage, and never for vehicles. This amounts to only an indulgence or kindness by the land-owner to his fellow-men and neighbors. There is not a show of any intent on the part of the land-owner to dedicate this way to public use, or to recognize such public use as an adverse right. “The public cannot acquire a right of way by use for the prescriptive period, if the use is by license or permission of the owner. The fact that a landowner has for many years permitted neighbors and summer visitors to pass through his gate and over his land to a beach on the seashore, does not of itself constitute such user as can ripen by lapse of time into a prescriptive right at common law on the part of the public to use the road.” Jones on Easements, s. 470. So Edgell cannot excuse himself on the theory that the way was a public one.
Third. Edgell seeks to maintain his claim of right of way on the ground that when he conveyed his interest in lot number one to Hall, it was distinctly understood that Edgell should have
Another theory for EdgelFs claim of right of way is, that when Hall conveyed the eleven and one-fourth acres to Mrs. Shav,er he pointed out the way, and reserved it orally for Edgell and others. The deed does not say so. Eor reasons stated above, the court properly excluded that evidence.
Eor Edgell the point is made that when an estate is partitioned by decree, there exists a right of way out over other lots to the highway. Concede this. But does such right exist, giving Edgell right to invade this eleven and one-fourth acres, when it and his own land constituted one lot in the partition, and when there is no necessity for him to invade the eleven and one-fourth acres, from the fact that he has access to the highway, or ready means of access, without touching the eleven and one-fourth acres ? Moreover, that decree dealt with the rights of the various lots as to outlet, and only gave to certain lots a right of way over certain other lots, and did not give lot number one any right of way, because it needed none, and certainly did not give one part
It is suggested that when Edgell conveyed the eleven and,one-fourth acres to Hall, he conveyed only his undivided interst, meaning to say, if I catch the meaning, that the land being undivided between him and Hall, his conveyance passed only the land; but his right to pass over the eleven and one-fourth acres being an individual right in him, that right did not pass under his deed. I do not see why a deed conveying "all the grantor’s right, title and interet, though undivided, with general warranty, does not pass every kind of interest the grantor has in the land at the time; or how against the grant, or the warranty, of such a deed the grantor can set up in detraction from his deed a pretended right, or a real right, vested at the date of that deed in him, to the injury of his grantee I fail to see how, when two men own land jointly, and one conveys to the other his interest in a specific portion of it, the deed fails to make the grantee absolute owner in severalty. But for another reason there ia nothing in this point. When two men own land together, you. cannot say there is invested in either any individualized right of way inhering in him as a distinct, separate easement or right, which does not pass to his fellow when he conveys to that fellow all his interest in a specific portion.
It is true this case stands upon a demurrer to evidence, under which the demurree’s evidence is taken to prove all it fairly can prove. Notwithstanding the holding in Maple v. John, and Talbott v. Railroad Co., 42 W. Va. 30 and 560, that the demur-rant does not waive his evidence conflicting with that of the demurree, I think the true rule is that he does do so, as held in the cases of Garrett v. Ramsey, 26 W. Va. 345, and many prior cases, and Gunn v. Railway Co., 42 W. Va. 676, and Bennett v. Perkins, 47 W. Va. 425, (35 S. E. 8). That careful and thoughtful author, Mr. Hogg, sustains the view held by the two later cases just named, 'which overrule the Maple and Talbott cases logically. In his second edition of Pleading & Forms the subject is ably discussed. On page 537 Mr. Hogg says: “But the province of the court upon a demurrer to the evidence has been settled, as to the effect of the act of 1891, chapter 131, section 9, of the Code, in the recent case of Gunn v. Ohio River Railroad Co., 42 W. Va. 676, (26 S. E. 546), which arose and was tried under the said act. It was contended in argument in that case
Affirmed.