34 Iowa 144 | Iowa | 1871
The evidence upon which the defendants were convicted is substantially as follows: The public began to use the road, for the obstruction of which defendants were indicted, about twenty-five years prior to the trial. In 1850, the proper county authority established the road upon the middle line of the quarter section, upon 'one side of which defendants’ land is situated. Prior to this the owners of the land erected their fences upon each side, leaving proper breadth of way. It was understood and believed that the road was used, and subsequently laid out upon the line prescribed in the order establishing it. It was discovered, upon an accurate survey recently made, that, as used, it was thirty feet from the true line, and upon defendants’ land; that is, the center of ^the road was that distance from the line of the quarter section. The defendants thereupon moved their fence out thirty feet to correspond with the survey, leaving a way of thirty feet only, instead of sixty feet, the breadth of the established road.
1. It was held by this court in Keys & Crawford v. Tait, 19 Iowa, 125, that ten years’ use of a way by the public, under a claim of right, will, under our statute of limitation, bar the right of the land owner. This rule is based upon the principles applicable to cases where the statute of
The same rules applicable to the ease of contesting claimants of land, where the statute of limitation is pleaded, must be applied to this case under the rule of Keys & Crawford v. Tait. If the public, under claim of right, mayliold a way under a rule based upon the statute of limitations, the protection is extended under the same exceptions to the like rule which prevails in eases between citizens contesting their respective rights to lands. We have ruled in Grube v. Wells, post, 148, that in ease of mistake of land owners as to the division line of their lands, the possessor, holding the lands as a part of his tract, and believing it to be within his boundary, is not protected by the statute. This rule is applicable to the case of the public using a way supposed to be on a certain line, but which, through mistake, is not really upon it. The claim of the public is confined to the true line; the use, in order to draw the benefit of the statute, must correspond with the claim of right. Under the rules of the cases just cited, the conclusion is irresistible. In the ease at bar, it appears that the use of the road did not correspond with the claim of right. The statute is, therefore, no bar to defendants resuming possession of the land mistakenly used by the public.
II. The same conclusion is reached by a different course of argument. It is briefly this: The right of the public to use the road rests upon dedication, or legal establishment by county authority. It cannot be supported under claim of dedication, for the fact that it was established by the proceedings at law is inconsistent with the claim of dedication. If it was established by dedication, the legal proceedings were needless. If the road existed by dedicar
If the statute qf limitatiops is relied upon on the ground of long user, in that case, if the’ use did not correspond with the true line of the road, as understood and intended by the public and land owners, then will the doctrine of Grube v. Wells defeat the operation of the statute.
The use in this case cannot be held to be adverse, as it was intended to conform to the line, prescribed in the order establishing the road, and the law will not presume a grant, or support a prescription on account of a slight and mistaken variance between the use and that line. Atkins v. Bordman et al., 20 Pick. 291; S. C., 2 Metc. 457; Comegys v. Carley, 3 Watts, 280; Gray v. McCreary, 4 Yates, 494; State v. Crow, 30 Iowa, 258.
III. The evidence in the case will not establish a dedication, for an essential element, the animus dedieandi of the land owners, is wanting. A dedication of land to the use of the public rests upon the intention and clear assent of the owner of the soil. When acts are relied upon to establish it, they must be inconsistent and irreconcilable with any inference except the animus dedieandi; they must be unambiguous and unequivocal. Irwin v. Dixon, 9 How. 10; see, also, 2 Smith’s Lead. Cas. (Hare & Wallace’s Notes), pp. 181, 182, and authorities cited. The evidence in this case fails to show the animus dediccmcli of defendants; in fact, it is shown that they did not intend to assent to the use of the land occupied by the public. Their assent was limited to the use of the land, upon the middle line of the quarter section.
We are of the opinion that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the conviction. ’
Reversed.