| Superior Court of New Hampshire | Dec 15, 1840
We are not aware that more than four modes of creating public highways have ever been recognized in this state. The statutes of the state point out two of these modes; firstly, by the authority of the selectmen of the different towns ; and, secondly, by the court of common pleas, acting through a road committee, or a board of road commissioners. The third mode is by charters, granted by the legislature to individuals, authorizing them to build turnpike roads, and to levy and collect tolls of those persons who travel upon them. The fourth mode is by long use of land by the public for the purposes of a highway, or by dedication of the land by the owners to the use of the public ; and this mode is recognized by numerous decisions of this court. State vs. Hampton, 1 N. H. Rep. 25; State vs. Campton, 2 N. H. Rep. 513; Pritchard vs. Atkinson, 3 N. H. Rep. 338, and 4 N. H. Rep. 9; Scott et al. vs. Wilson, 3 N. H. Rep. 325; Barker vs. Clark, 4 N. H. Rep. 383; Hopkins et al. vs. Crombie et als., 4 N. H. Rep. 523.
After a highway has been established in any one of these modes, the right acquired’ by the public in the land over which the highway passes is well settled in this state. This right is only an easement; a right of passage, a power to travel over the land. The public acquire no interest in the soil, except so far as it may be necessary to use it within the limits of the highway, for the purpose of keeping the road in proper repair. Makepeace vs. Worden et als., 1 N. H. Rep.
A charter, granted by the legislature to individuals, authorizing them to build a turnpike road, vests in the corporation no other nor greater right to the soil than is acquired by the public, when a highway is created in either of the other modes above enumerated. State vs. Hampton, 2 N. H. Rep. 25; Robbins vs. Borman et al., 1 Pick. 122; Adams vs. Emerson, 6 Pick. 57; Tucker vs. Tower, 9 Pick. 109. And the same doctrine is held in the courts of New-York. It is said, by the court, in the case of Hooker vs. Utica and Minden Turnpike Co., 12 Wendell 371, that the title to the land is vested in a turnpike corporation “ only for the purposes of a road, and that when the road is abandoned the land reverts to the original owners.” Nor is any interest vested in the public in the land over which a turnpike road passes. The public have a right to travel upon the turnpike road, on condition that they pay the tolls which the corporation may lawfully assess.
Neither the public, then, nor a turnpike corporation, acquire any other right to the land than that of using it for the legitimate purposes of a road. There is no substantial distinction between a turnpike road and a common highway, so far as the right of soil is concerned. Indeed, the only difference between them is, that the former, instead of being made at the public expense in the first instance, is authorized and laid out by public authority, and made at the expense of individuals, and the cost of construction and maintenance is reimbursed by a toll levied by public authority for the purpose. Commonwealth vs. Wilkinson, 16 Pick. R. 175. When a highway is legally discontinued, the public right of passage ceases, the duty of the town to keep it in repair no longer exists, and the owner has his land again, free from the incumbrance. Hampton vs. Coffin, 4 N. H. Rep. 517. And if a road be again required over the same ground by the public convenience, the mode prescribed by the statute must
The conclusion to which we have arrived, is fortified by the case of Commonwealth vs. Western, 1 Pick. 136. In that case, a turnpike corporation had laid out their road over or near a part of the county road in the town of Western, in consequence of which that part of the road was discontinued by the court of sessions. The corporation were after-wards released from their obligation to repair the turnpike where it had superseded the county road, and an information was filed against the town for not keeping it in repair. It was held that the road, being discontinued, ceased to be chargeable to the town, and that it belonged to the court of sessions to lay it out anew, or establish a different road, as they should see fit.
But it is contended, that since the repeal of the charter the road has been used a sufficient length of time to evince its usefulness to the public, as a highway ; that a dedication may be presumed from the circumstances of the case ; and that consequently the town is liable to keep it in repair.
Upon the question, as to the presumption of dedication to common use, by the proprietors of land, there has been some difference of opinion, and even a contrariety of decisions as to the proof of such dedication. It seems, however, to be agreed on the one haxrd, that if a bar, or a written notice of “ no thoroughfare,” &c., be constantly kept up, the intention of the owner to exclude the public will be sufficiently clear • and on the other hand, that long user of a way, without any obstacle, at a time when the owner of the soil is in possession, and cognizant of the user, will afford the strongest presumption of a dedication. The material question has generally been, whether the circumstances have been such as clearly to indicate the intent of the owner of the soil to appropriate it to the public use. An express, formal dedication to the public, and an acceptance, either by some public agent, properly authorized, or by long use by the public,would, upon
So long as the charter remained in force, the road was a public highway, and the public, under certain restrictions and limitations, had the right to use it for such purpose. The corporation were bound to keep it in repair; and this liability did not depend on the fact, whether the road was useful or unnecessary, or whether there was any travel upon it. The case finds that the road, since the month of June, A. D. 1837, has been travelled by all who chose to pass over it, and also that in August, A. D. 1839, when the indictment was found, the road was in great decay. Whether these facts amount to sufficient evidence of dedication, and acceptance by the public, must be determined from an examination of the cases.
Neither the utility of the road, nor its actual use by the public, are of themselves sufficient; but there must be either an express dedication, or circumstances from which the assent of the owner can be presumed. It is rather the intention of
Where there had been a frequent change of tenants, coupled with a long, notorious, and uninterrupted sufferance, to which the landlord’s steward was privy, although there was no proof that the landlord had ever been in possession, Lord Ellenborough presumed the concurrence of the landlord, and held that notice to the steward was notice to the landlord. Rex vs. Barr, 4 Camp. 16. But where the owner of the soil was bound to permit a qualified passage, user by the public at large for many years was held not to be evidence of a dedication. Rex vs. St. Benedict, 4 B. & A. 447. And the erection of a bar, although it may have been knocked down, rebuts the presumption of a dedication. Roberts vs. Karr, 1 Camp. 262, n. It is not sufficient that there is a license merely, to pass over the land : there must be a dereliction on the part of the owners in favor of the public. British Museum vs. Finnis, 5 C. & P. 460; Marquis of Stafford vs. Coyney, 5 B. & C. 257.
The period during which a road has been used by the public, may, upon the authorities, be evidence both of an acceptance by the public, and of a dedication. Upon this question the cases are somewhat contradictory. In Rex vs. Hudson, 2 Strange 909, it was held that leaving a way open for
The case of State vs. Campton, 2 N. H. Rep. 513, which was the first express judicial recognition in this state of the principle of the dedication of a highway, arose upon an indictment for not building a bridge. The bridge was erected by individuals about the year 1789, and was used by the public without toll, until the year 1820, with only the interval of a year, during which it had been carried away. It was rebuilt by subscription, and kept in repair by the town for about fourteen years, when it was again rebuilt, at the expense of the town. There was no other dedication nor acceptance of the bridge, than such as could be inferred from these facts. In pronouncing the judgment of the court, Mr. Justice Woodbury says: “The true test seems to be, that the bridge, if dedicated to the public, if used by the public, and found to be of public utility, should not continue a burden to the individuals who built it.”
*416 “ Though the use and repairs of it by the public may have been under a protest against their liability, and for a shorter period than twenty years, the liability is still fixed, if the bridge be not indicted as a nuisance, and be used by the public so long and so much as to evince its usefulness to them.”
In the case of Pritchard vs. Atkinson, 4 N. H. Rep. 9, it was held that, the defendant’s acquiescence in the laying out, making and use of the road for seventeen years, was competent evidence to be left to a jury, as proof of a dedication.
But in Baker vs. Clark, 4 N. H. Rep. 380, it was held, that proof that people in the neighborhood have long been accustomed to pass in a certain way through a close, without showing that the way has been thrown open by the owner of the close, or made or repaired by the public, is not sufficient to establish a public highway. And Richardson, C. J., in remarking on the length of time necessary for a dedication, says, that “ much depends on the circumstances. When an individual deliberately throws open a road to the public, and permits it to be travelled by all without interruption, we have no doubt that in much less time than twenty years these facts might be left to a jury as evidence of a dedication.”
In this case, the evidence both of a dedication and of an acceptance, is derived from the use of the road for two years subsequent to the repeal of the charter, by all persons who chose to travel upon it. But the persons who chose to travel upon a road so much out of repair that a proper occasion existed for the interference of a grand jury, could hardly be so numerous as to evince the utility of the road. Whether the road, if in repair, would be useful to the public, we are not informed. If any inference can be made from the repeal of the charter, it would be, that the travel on the road was not sufficient to enable the corporation to take tolls enough to keep the road in repair. And we are of opinion, that the circumstances of this case are not competent to be submitted to a jury, as evidence either of the utility of the road as a
In all cases where mere lapse of time is offered as evidence of a fact, it is extremely difficult to fix upon a particular period which shall be considered either as conclusive, or as competent evidence to be submitted to a jury. The strength of the evidence often depends more upon the attending circumstances, than on the length of the time. After many years, even such a user as this might have ripened into a right, and the consent of all the world might perhaps be presumed. But the fact that no repairs have been made on the road, the feeble character of the evidence of the public travel, and of the utility of the road, and the suggestions which have been made against presuming an intention by the owners to surrender their land, justify us in the conclusion that this is not a highway which the town are bound to repair.
Town discharged.