Gloster v. Wade

Foote, C.

According to the allegations of the complaint in this action, Wade had torn down the fence on the land of Gloster, which the latter had replaced, and .the former was threatening again to tear it down at a *408certain point, and travel across the plaintiff’s land, in violation of his rights and to his damage. An injunction restraining the defendant from doing the injuries threatened, and for the recovery of damages for the alleged trespass already committed, were prayed for.

The defendant denied all the material allegations of the complaint, and set up by way of justification and de- ' fense for his alleged acts that they were done in accordance with law, in pursuance of an order from the board of supervisors of the county, he being a road overseer, and that the land alleged to have been intruded upon by him had become, and was by dedication, a public road and -highway. The cause came on to be tried before a jury, which was discharged during the progress of the trial by the court, for sufficient reasons.

That tribunal then proceeded to hear the cause, made its findings of fact, and rendered judgment for the plaintiff as prayed for, except for damages, which were expressly waived; from which, and an order denying a new trial, defendant appeals.

The whole matter turns upon the point as to whether or not there had been for some twelve years immediately prior to the trespass complained of any law upon the statute-book applicable to the county of Modoc, by which the public could by user acquire a right to a highway as such. The court below held no such law to exist, or to have existed within that time.

The appellant’s contention is, that such a law did exist, and was operative in this cause, by means of which the public, by the use of the land in question continuously for more than five years, had acquired it as a public road and highway in Modoc County; that the dedication of it as a highway was complete.

In section 2619 of the Political Code (as it existed up to the passage of the- act of March 30, 1874, which latter act is found at page 116 of Amendments to the Codes, ■1873 and 1874), it is provided, among other things, that *409“all roads used as such for a period of more than five years are highways.”

The section was amended by the act supra to read as follows:—

“Sec. 2619. Roads laid out and recorded as highways by order of the board of supervisors are highways. Whenever any corporation owning a toll-bridge, or a turnpike, plank, or a common wagon road, is dissolved, or has expired by limitation or non-user, the bridge or road becomes a highway.”

Section 38 (page 129) of the same act provides: “This act shall apply only to the following named counties: Calaveras, Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, Ventura, Fresno, Kern, Tehama, Contra Costa, Marin, Lake, Sierra, Plumas, Sacramento, Sutter, Mendocino, Mariposa, Alameda, and Lassen; provided, that this act shall not be in force and effect in Solano, Los Angeles, San Joaquin, and Yuba counties until the first Monday of March, eighteen hundred and seventy-six (1876).”

The effect of these provisions of law taken together is, as we think, that section 2619, supra, remained, for the purpose of this action, unaffected by the act supra, so far as concerned Modoc County. In that county, during the twelve years immediately prior to the trespass complained of, a highway might have become such to all intents and purposes by user on the part of the public for more than five years continuously.

This, among other questions, seems to have been involved in the case of Bulger v. Foss, 65 Cal. 251, where the dedication by user of a highway in Humboldt County was under consideration, which county occupied the same position with relation to section 38 of the act supra as did Modoc County, where the highway now in hand is located. Although the point was not directly adverted to, the appellate court appears to have taken the view of the matter which we do.

The defendant ought, therefore, to have been permitted *410to introduce his proffered evidence that the land in dispute had been used continuously and uninterruptedly as a highway by the traveling public for the “last past twelve years.”

The matter was clearly within the issues raised by the pleadings, after the amendment had been made to the defendant’s answer.

For the error committed in not admitting the evidence as offered, the judgment and order should be reversed.

Hayne, C., and Belcher, C. 0., concurred.

The Court.

—For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order are reversed.

Rehearing denied.