State v. Transue

131 Mo. App. 323 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908

BROADDUS, P. J.

Tbe defendant was tried on information and convicted on a charge of obstructing a public highway. A highway existed at or near the place where the defendant is charged with having obstructed it, prior to the year 1850, at which time the Legislature of the State passed an act providing for the location of a State road from Owens Ferry on the Missouri River in Clay county to the Iowa State line. [Laws of Mo., 1855, p. 629.] The commissioners appointed for the purpose, in pursuance of the act, located the road, forty feet in width, between the points named, which passed through the city of Plattsburg in the county of Clinton. At a point about one mile east of said city the road crossed what is known as Smith’s Fork Creek, or Smith’s Fork of Platt River, over which there was a bridge at that time. Forty-three years ago James H. Birch, Jr., who was then owner of the lands on both sides the road obtained an order from the county court of Clinton county whereby a change was made in the road north of the bridge, since when it has remained practically unchanged. The old bridge has long since disappeared and at least two others have been built in its place, the last of which uoav rest upon the pillars from which the superstructure of the former had been carried away by high water in the creek. There was what the witnesses called a ford at the creek, just west of the bridge, to which a passAvay diverged from the established road a short distance north of the bridge and which after it passed over the creek again entered the said road. It was this passAvay and not the road which defendant is charged with having obstructed. Birch conveyed his land to James Dykes, he to Joseph Williamson and he in turn conveyed to W. F. Davis, who conveyed the land to a Mr. Thomas, and the *327title finally vested in the defendant. While Davis was in possession of the land he caused his fence to he rebuilt along on the west and to the north side of the bridge which left a strip of ground between the fence and road through which this passway was located, the latter hoAvever not occupying all of said space. It was shown that the fence Avas made over thirty years ago, and there had been a fence there before that time, and that Davis was specific in his instructions to his employee to put his fence where the old one stood. It was shown that afterwards this fence was torn down by Mr. Thomas who had then become the owner of the land, and who erected a new fence that took into his enclosure six or eight feet of said space; but that when he Avas threatened Avith prosecution he moved it back about four feet, where it remained until the defendant moved his fence farther out which had the effect of obstructing the passway itself although he did not include all of said strip, in his enclosure.

All the witnesses on both sides téstify to the use of the passway by the public for more than forty years. There was evidence that at times it was worked by the road authorities, and that at times the debris that had accumulated in the ford of the creek was cleared out to keep it in passable condition. It is to be gathered from the testimony that the passway was used continuously during all those years by the people who traveled the road in going to and from the city of Plattsburg. That by many the ford was preferred to the bridge as a means of crossing the stream, and that its use and occupation Avas permitted without dissent by all the OAvners of the land adjoining except in the instance of Thomas, at the time when he moved his fence out and then back again as mentioned.

The defendant contends first that the evidence does not support the allegations of the information. The information charges that defendant obstructed the *328Plattsburg and Liberty Road where said road crossed Smith’s Fork of Platte River; and that the proof to sustain the charge was of an obstruction of a ford leading from Plattsburg and Liberty road crossing Smith’s Fork Greek on the west- side of the bridge and east of defendant’s land. If the variance between the information and the evidence depends upon the use of the descriptive words Smith’s Fork of Platte River used in the information and the Avords Smith’s Fork Greek used by some of the witnesses there was no variance as they both referred to the same stream of water. In the description in the original location the stream is called Smith’s Fork of Platte River. Whatever the name used it had reference to the same watercourse.

But Ave suppose the point sought to be raised by the objection goes to the merits of the case viz., that the passway was no part of the public road described. In support of this contention we are cited to certain authorities. It is held: “Before the defendant could be convicted of obstructing a public road, the State was bound to show that a public road was established at the point in question.” [State v. Cunningham, 61 Mo. App. 188.] But the holding of the court was predicated on the theory that there did not exist an ancient road, therefore it should have been shown that one was established by order of the county court. In State v. Parsons, 53 Mo. App. 135, it Avas held that the order of the court was so defective that it did not legally establish a public road; and that the proceeding could not be aided by the provision of the statute of user for ten years as no such use for that period of time had been shown. In State v. Ramsey, 76 Mo. 398, all that is shown by the record is that there was an order of the county court establishing the road; proof that the same had been used as such; and that defendant had obstructed it. Held sufficient to support a conviction. In State v. Scott, 27 Mo. App. 541, it is held that there *329was no evidence of dedication and as the land was not used as a road for the space of ten years it conld not become a road by user. In Golahar v. Gates, 20 Mo. 237, the proceedings to open a highway were held void because the way over defendant’s land had not been condemned for public use in the manner provided by law.

In no one of the cases mentioned is there any holding that it is no offense against the statute for obstructing a road which has been established by user or dedication. On the contrary it is affirmatively held that land may be dedicated to public use without writing and “may be manifested by acts and declarations.” [Baker v. Vanderburg, 99 Mo. 378; Golden v. Clinton, 54 Mo. App. 100; Rose v. St. Charles, 49 Mo. 509; McGrath v. Nevada, 188 Mo. 102.] “The public may acquire the right to the use of a road on the land of another from its use and adverse occupancy, acquiesced in by the landowner for a period of ten years.” [Zimmerman v. Snowden, 88 Mo. 218; State v. Walters, 69 Mo. 463; State v. Wells, 70 Mo. 635.]

Section 9472, Revised Statutes 1899, after providing that user by the public of a road for the period of ten years shall be sufficient to legally establish the same where the proceedings to open it have been defective, “provides that in all other cases ... no lapse of time shall divest the owner of his title to his land, unless in addition to the use of the road by the public for the period of ten consecutive years, there shall have been public money or labor expended thereon for such period.” This statute is a modification of the common law and was enacted in 1887. Leaving out of question the fact that the passway in question had been used for a long period of time prior to the passage of the statute, it seems to us that under the change thereby made in the common law, the occupation and user by the public of the strip in question for a period of more than ten years before the date of the alleged obstruction, and *330the same having been worked by the road authorities, the State showed that it was a public road. The act of Davis the then owner of the land when he built his fence as stated, tends to show a donation of the strip to the public use. And the subsequent conduct of Thomas when he became the OAvner of the land and moved his fence back as stated on the demand of the road overseer was a recognition of the fact that the land had been donated to the public for a highway.

But it is said that the acts of Davis and the subsequent owners of the adjoining land, in making the conveyances to the same Avere inconsistent with the theory of dedication, as they in each instance made no reservation of said strip. We have examined these conveyances and find such t'o be the fact. But we also find that they conveyed by congressional description with some exceptions, and that they failed not only to include in such exceptions the strip in controversy but also the road as laid out by the commissioners. These acts of the different OAvners were not of any significance whatever as it is usual in such cases not to take into account, in the Avay of exceptions in deeds, lands occupied by higlrways as the title is in fact in the adjoining landowners subject to the public easements. But whether it shoAved or not a dedication to public use there can be no question but what the State established a legal road by prescription.

We have examined the objections made to the admission of certain evidence and to instructions given for the State and find that they are without merit, and have been answered by what has already been said. Instruction numbered 3 offered by defendant and refused by the court which asked the court to Avithdraw from the consideration of the jury the testimony of Avitnesses as to the direction of Davis in placing his fence as stated, was properly refused.

*331Finding no error in the trial the cause is affirmed.

All concur.