90 S.E. 941 | N.C. | 1916
Defendant denied liability and pleaded the three years statute of limitations, Revisal, sec. 5, subsec. 3.
The summons seems to have been issued in December, 1914, of January, 1915, and there was evidence tending to show that the poles were originally placed on plaintiff's land and on the right of way of the North Carolina Railroad Company more than four years before that date, and that in 1909, owing to the fact that the Southern Railway, lessee of North Carolina Railroad, had constructed a double track, the defendant moved its poles and lines further out into plaintiff's field, where it was still maintained and operated, and that in 1914, not long before action instituted, defendant had repaired the portion of its line situate on plaintiff's land, putting in several new poles, these being put in the same holes as formerly and causing further damage and injury to said land.
On issues submitted, the jury rendered the following verdict:
1. Is the plaintiff M. F. Teeter the owner and in the possession of the lands over which the defendant constructed its telegraph line within the right of way of the railroad company? Answer: "Yes."
2. Is the plaintiff's cause barred by the statute of limitations, as alleged in the answer? Answer: "No."
3. What permanent damages, if any, is plaintiff entitled to recover of the defendant for the erection and maintaining of said telegraph line on his land as existing and in operation? Answer: "$250."
Judgment on the verdict, and defendant excepted and appealed.
It is not denied by defendant that the telegraph line superimposed upon a railroad right of way is an additional burden which entitled the owner to compensation, Hodges v. Tel. Co.,
Speaking to this section in Sample v. Lumber Co., 150 N.C. pp. 165166, action for wrongful entry and cutting timber on another's land, the Court said: "True, the statute declares that actions for trespass on real estate shall be barred in three years, and when the trespass is a (786) continuing one such action shall be commenced within three years from the original trespass, and not thereafter; but this term, `continuing trespass,' was no doubt used in reference to wrongful trespass upon real property, caused by structures permanent in their nature and made by companies in the exercise of some quasi- public franchise. Apart from this, the term could only refer to cases where a wrongful act, being entire and complete, causes continuing damage, and was never intended to apply when every successive act amounted to a distinct and separate renewal of wrong."
Referring to the language of the section and the interpretation of it suggested in that decision, the Court is inclined to the opinion that this is a continuing trespass within the meaning of the law, and for damages incident to the original wrong, and for that alone, no recovery could be sustained. But this is a suit for permanent damages, and on recovery and payment, so far as plaintiff is concerned, confers on the defendant the right to maintain its line on plaintiff's land for and indefinite period and to enter on the same whenever reasonably required for the "planting, repairing, and preservation of its poles and other property." Caviness v.R. R., ante, 305. It is a suit to recover for the value of the easement, which can pass to defendant only by grant or by proceedings to condemn the property pursuant to the statute, Revisal, secs. 1572-1573, or by adverse and continuous user for the period of twenty years.
In case of railroads, by section 394 of the Revisal this period has been reduced to five years, but there being no such statute as to telegraph companies, the common-law period of twenty years is required. Geer v. WaterCo.,
It was objected further for defendant that plaintiff, in giving his opinion as to the amount the value of the land was decreased by the *841 imposition of the easement, was allowed, in describing his property, to base his estimate upon its value both for farming lands and its eligibility for factory sites, the land being used then only for farming; but the objection is without merit.
In Brown v. Power Co.,
In R. R. v. Armfield,
We find no error in the proceedings, and the judgment for plaintiff is affirmed.
No error.
Cited: Query v. Telegraph Co.,