This case comes before this court upon the following report: This is an action on the case by the owners of Moneka block in Union to recover against the defendant for obstructing an alleged right of way. The defendant has built a building over the right of way claimed. The way claimed is around the east end of Moneka block. The southerly line of said block faces Union Common. Said way claimed is across land which is a part of the Free Church lot, so called, which church is a duly organized and a regular parish under the laws of this State. The block, church, surroundng land and buildings are as shown on the plan. The said church was built in 1839, and that and the lot have, up to within less than twenty years, been used for the church purposes. Moneka block was built in 1857, and since that time the way in question has been so used by the owners of said block as would give them a right of way if the property over which it is claimed were private property, unless the fact that others used it would prevent the acquisition of that right, it being admitted that the use by the plaintiff was not exclusive, but that others having occasion used it. The defendant contends that no right of way could be acquired across said church property. If the plaintiffs have a right of way, judgment is to be awarded for them for an *8amount sufficient to carry costs. Otherwise judgment is to be entered for the defendant.
The defendant objects in the first place that plaintiffs in their writ have not set out any right of way by limits and bounds, and have left the location of the claimed right indefinite and uncertain. But that question is not before us. The parties have stipulated in the report that “if the plaintiffs have a right of way” judgment is to be awarded for them. The existence of a right of way is the only question submitted to the court; not its location.
It is admitted that the plaintiffs have used the way in such manner and for such length of time, as would have gained for them a prescriptive right of way, if the land over which the right is claimed had been private property. By the phrase “private property” we understand is meant property belonging to a private individual; church property is private property as distinguished from the property of the State or of a municipality, which is public property. Property held for pious or charitable uses, not for the whole public, but for a limited portion of the public, is private property, and as such, we have no doubt, is subject to the application of the doctrine of prescriptive easements. Kinsell v. Daggett, 11 Maine, 309; Kilburn v. Adams, 7 Met., 33; Burnham v. McQuestion, 48 N. H., 446; Society for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Hayden, 38 Vt., 603; Mowry v. City of Providence, 10 R. I., 52. Accordingly we hold that a right of way could be acquired by prescription across the church property.
Was such a right of way acquired ? Certainly, the fact that others having occasion used it did not prevent the plaintiffs from acquiring the right for themselves. That needs no argument.
The space between the plaintiff’s building and the church edifice was about 16 feet wide. The exhibits which are made a part of the report show that the land in front of and about the church edifice, including that at the side of it over which the right of way is claimed, was open and unenclosed. And this being so, the defendant relies largely upon Kilburn v. Adams, 7 Met., 33, in which case Chief Justice Shaw speaking for the court said, that where a tract of land attached to a public building, such as a meeting house, and occupied with such house, is designedly left open *9and unenclosed, for convenience or ornament, the rule is that “the passage of persons over it, in common with those for whose use it is appropriated is in general to be regarded as permissive, and under an implied license, and not adverse. Such a use is not inconsistent with the only use which the proprietors think fit to make of it; and therefore, until they think proper to enclose it, such use is not adverse, and will not preclude them from enclosing it, when other views of the interests of the proprietors render it proper to do so. And though an adjacent proprietor may make such use of the open land more frequently than another, yet the same rule wiii apply, unless there be some decisive act indicating a separate and exclusive use, under a claim of right. A regularly formed and wrought way across the ground, paved, macadamized, or gravelled and fitted for use as a way, from his own estate to the highway, indicating a use distinct from any use to be made of it by the proprietors, would, in our opinion, be evidence of such exclusive use and claim of right. So would be any plain, unequivocal act, indicating a peculiar and exclusive claim, open and ostensible, and distinguishable from that of others. But the fact that a particular Hack or line was a little more worn and marked by travel than the general surface of the lot, or, that the adjacent proprietor had •occasionally levelled a spot gullied by the rain, could scarcely be regarded, independently of other proof, as indicative of a claim of right.” We do not question the soundness of this doctrine.
But it will be noticed that the discussion in Kilburn v. Adams relates to the evidentiary force of long and uninterrupted user for a way of the unenclosed lands about an academy building which, of course, would be the same in case of a church edifice, as in the present case. It relates to a presumption of a permissive use under an implied license. It points out that evidence of decisive acts of an adverse character are necessary to overcome the presumption of possession. It marks, to a certain extent, a distinction between the use of such lands and those of a private proprietor. The general rule sustained in most jurisdictions is that where the ■claimant has shown an open, visible, continuous and unmolested use for twenty years or more, inconsistent with the owner’s rights, and under circumstances from which may be inferred the knowl*10edge and acquiescense of the owner, the use will be presumed to be under a claim of right, and adverse to the owner, so as to place upon the owner, in order to avoid the acquisition of a prescriptive easement, the burden of rebutting this presumption by showing that the use was permissive. Barnes v. Haynes, 13 Gray 188; Blake v. Everett, 1 All., 248; 9 Ruling Case Law, 781. See Rollins v. Blackden, 112 Maine, 459. But as held in Kilburn v. Adams, where the use is of the open and unenclosed lands about a quasi public building, as a church or academy, the presumption is otherwise, and the distinctively adverse character of the use must be shown to rebut the presumption of permission.
Now the distinction between Kilburn v. Adams and the case at bar is this. In this case the. presumption, arising from possession is not a factor. It is admitted that the use was of such a character' as would give the plaintiffs a right of way as against an individual proprietor. Such a use was necessarily adverse. The admission excludes any inference of permission. No presumption of permissive use is admissible. We must hold therefore that the plaintiff’s use of the way has been adverse for the requisite period of time to acquire a prescriptive easement. And since, as we hold, such an easement may be acquired in the land of a church society, it follows that the plaintiffs have a legal right of way, and are entitled to judgment.
Judgment for plaintiffs for $21