143 Va. 201 | Va. | 1925
delivered the opinion of the court.
The Back Hollow private road intersects the Poor Valley public road on a ten acre tract of land in Smyth county. Alexander Stuart and his tenants used the Back Hollow road to get from the Poor Valley road to his lands, which were not accessible from the public road. The Tottens were in possession and claimed ownership of the ten acre tract, and locked the gate entering the Back Hollow road.
Stuart filed his bill against the Tottens, alleging that he owned the ten acres claimed by the defendants, but, if not, that he was entitled to a right of way through the land by prescription, and prayed that the
The court found it unnecessary to pass upon the question of title to the ten acre' tract over which the right of way runs, but decreed that the complainant was entitled to a right of way over the Back Hollow road, and granted the injunction prayed for. From that decree this appeal was allowed.
The law governing the acquisition of a private right of way by prescription over the lands of another is well settled by the decisions of this court, and may be briefly stated, as follows:
A permissive user will never ripen into such an easement, which presumes a grant and is in no way affected by the existence of another way.
The claimant may establish such a right of way by showing that he and those under whom he holds have used the same adversely under a claim of right, continuously, uninterruptedly, exclusively and with the knowledge and acquiescence of the owner of the servient estate, for at least twenty years.
The use of “exclusive” when it is proprietary, not a use by the public generally, and is exercised under some claim which is independent of and does not depend for enjoyment upon similar rights of others. It is not nece.ssary, however, that the claimant be the only one to enjoy the right of way, as other persons may acquire a prescriptive right to use it. When a way has been so used for a period of more than twenty years, the origin of the way not being shown, the bona fides of the claim of right is established and a presumption of a right to the use arises from the long acquiescence .of the owne,r of the servient estate, and
“ * * * Where there has been an open, visible, continuous and unmolested use of the land by another for a period of time analogous to that prescribed by the statute of limitations as sufficient to acquire title by adverse possession, the use will be presumed to be under a claim of right, so %s to place upon the owner of the servient estate, in order to avoid the acquisition of an easement by prescription, the burden of rebutting this presumption by showing that the use was permissive, and not under claim of right.” 44 L. R. A. (N. S.), 98. Davis v. Wilkinson, supra.
Testing the instant case by the foregoing principles, it is clear that the court did not err in entering the decree complained of.
There is no evidence as to when the .use of the Back Hollow road began; and it is not contended that it is a public road. The testimony is somewhat conflicting, but it sufficiently appears from the greater weight of the evidence that the occupants of the land owned by Alexander Stuart have, for more than fifty
Witnesses testified that they had known it for fifty years and that it was an old road when they first knew it. When the Tottens first claimed the ten acre tract, they recognized the right of the complainant and his tenants to use the road by making no objection to its use for six or seven years and by placing fences on each side of it.
Prior to the present controversy, no one ever seriously questioned the existence of the easement claimed.
A further discussion of the testimony is unnecessary.
Affirmed.