The great question in this case is, what effect the infancy of the plaintiff has upon the right of way claimed to have been acquired over the plaintiff’s land, by the defendants and their predecessors in title, by prescription, or adverse possession for a period of more than fifteen years. It is now claimed that the jury should have been directed to find on the evidence whether the adverse use of the way began before the land descended to the plaintiff, and should have been in-. structed on the law of the case on the theory of finding that the adverse use began after the land descended to the plaintiff, and during his infancy. But it appears from the case that the testimony tended to show that the use of the way began as early as 1828, by Penniman, and under a claim of right, in pursuance of the agreement made when it was discontinued as a highway. It does not appear that any evidence was given tending to contra-*510diet this ; indeed it rather appears that this commencement of the use was shown by the plaintiff’s own evidence. None of the requests made by the plaintiff’s counsel to the court point to any such state of the case, so that we can only consider this as one of those common efforts to raise a question in this court on exceptions, which was not made at all in the court below.
It must be taken then, under the finding of the jury, that the use of the way began before the estate descended to the plaintiff, and that it was continued under a claim of right, and without interruption, for more than fifteen years ; but that during .this period the title came to the plaintiff, who was an infant, and so continued from 1837 to 1853 ; so that, if the plaintiff was right in his request, that the jury should be charged that only the time after the plaintiff became of age should be reckoned, there was nothing for the jury to consider, and if he was right in his request that the period of his nonage should be deducted, then the jury should have been directed to find whether the use of the way before, and after the disability, was sufficient to make the requisite period.
We understand the case to have been submitted, to the jury on this ground: that if the adverse use of the way began during the life of the plaintiff’s father, or his grantor, and was continued for the period of fifteen years, without interruption, the right was acquired, though before the expiration of the fifteen years the land over which the way was used, descended to the plaintiff, who was an infant.
The question arises on the correctness of this instruction. The statute of limitations does not extend to these incorporeal rights, but it has now become universally settled that an uninterrupted use of a way or other easement, under a claim of right, for the period of time fixed by the statute as a bar to the recovery of lands held adversely, gives the person so using it a full and absolute right to such easement, as much as if granted to him.. This has been settled by a long course of judicial decisions, and is founded primarily on the ancient doctrine of prescriptions, but has finally by the courts been made to conform, by analogy, to the statute of limitations applicable to lands, in *511all substantial particulars, so far as the difference in the subjects will allow.
cases, is that from such a possession, continued f the statute, the law will presume a grant, or courts will direct juries to presume a grant. But this is purely a legal fiction. The doctrine proceeds wholly upon the ground of presuming a right after such length of possession, and not at all upon the ground that there ever was a grant made, but which has been lost, and though it may be shown ever so clearly -that no grant was ever made, the case is not at all varied. The general language of the books, found
A great deal of learning has been expended upon the question whether, in such case, the presumption arising from the length of possession is a presumption of law, or one of fact, and all the cases on the subject have been industriously brought to our attention in the argument of this case,
The counsel for the plaintiff say that this presumption of a grant from such long possession is a presumption of fact, to be found by a jury from such possession, unless rebutted, and that therefore any evidence which tends to show that no such grant was made, or could have been made, is admissible, and should be submitted to the jury. If it were true that such was the real ground upon which these rights are sustained, the view of the counsel would be unanswerable. But the counsel themselves do not claim that this grant which is presumed is anything but mere fiction. The true view of the subject is well stated by Wilde, J., in Coolidge v. Learned, 8 Pick. 504. He says: “ It has long been settled, that the undisturbed enjoyment -of an incorporeal right affecting the lands- of another for twenty years, the possession being adverse and unrebutted, imposes on the j.ury a duty to presume a grant, and in all cases juries are so instructed by the court. Not however, because either the court or jury believe the presumed grant to have been actually made, but because public policy and convenience require that long continued possession should not be disturbed.”
It is said in many of the cases that this length of possession is only evidence to be submitted to the jury. If by this is meant, *512that where it is conceded or proved that there has been an uninterrupted possession under claim of right for the requisite time, and this is not encountered by any evidence to rebut the legal effect of it, that it is a proper question to be submitted to the jury to say whether this gives a right, or not, it is not in our opinion correct.
If there be any conflict of evidence as to the length, or char■acter of the case, or any evidence proper to rebut the acquiring the right, it then becomes proper to submit it to the jury. But where it stands solely upon the conceded or proved possession under claim of right for the requisite time, it is never submitted to a jury to find the right established or not, according to their judgments. And whether it is more proper for the court to tell the jury that it is their duty from this to presume a grant, or to tell the jury that from this the law presumes a grant, is mere idle speculation. In fact, and in substance, it is a verdict directed by the court, as a matter of law. And if it were submitted to the jury, and they were to return a verdict against the right, no court would ever accept the verdict.
Mr. Washburn, who reviews all the decisions on the question whether the presumption to be drawn from possession or use of an easement" for the required time, is one of law, or one of fact, and who gives the weight of his opinion in favor of its being a presumption of fact for the jury,' after all, says : “ It may, therefore, be stated as a general proposition of law, that if there has been an uninterrupted user and enjoyment of an easement, a stream of water for instance, in a particular way, for more than twenty-one, or twenty, or such other period of years as answers to the local period of limitation, it affords conclusive presumption off right in the party who shall have enjoyed it, provided such use and enjoyment be not by authority of law, or by or under some agreement between the owner of the inheritance and the party who shall have enjoyed it.” Wash, on Eas. &c. 70.
In the case of Townsend v. Downer, 32 Vt. 183, Aldis, J., in giving the judgment of the court, says: “When from long possession, with or without auxiliary circumstances, a grant is pi’esumed as matter of law, and without regard to the fact whether *513such a grant was really made or not, then it may with the strictest propriety be said that the law presumes a grant. In such a case, under the practice in this state, it would be the duty of the court to direct a verdict.”
He then proceeds to speak of the class of cases where lapse of time and long possession' is relied on with other circumstances, as evidence to establish that a grant has been made in fact. The opinion then proceeds : “ We do not understand that there is still a third class of cases in which, although the grant is not presumed by the court as pure matter of law, and is not found by the jury as a fact, still the court may direct the jury to presume a grant, and thus by the intervention of the jury, but without the exercise of their judgment upon the evidence, establish the grant as if it were a mere inference of the law. Language may be found in some books and decisions favoring such a view, but the doctrine is clearly against the whole current of English and American decisions, and tends to confound the proper and separate jurisdictions of court And jury. ‘ This erroneous view, we think, has arisen from the want of precision in language, when treating of presumptive evidence and the grants proved by or presumed from it.”'
We think therefore, that in substance the presumption arising from such long continued possession, unrebutted, is’a presumption / of law, and that it is conclusive evidence, or sufficient evidence to warrant the court in holding that it confers a right on thep possessor to the extent of his use.
But it does not in our opinion go very far in determining the question in this case, whether the presumption arising from the length of possession is one of law, or one of fact, for whichever it may be it is liable to be rebutted in various ways. It may be shown to have originated or continued by leave of the owner.; that it has not been under a claim of right, or not continuous ; or that it has been interrupted by the owner of the land, and whenever any evidence is introduced tending to invalidate the right claimed, on any of these grounds, that the case becomes a proper one to submit to the jury.
But all authorities concur in saying that this doctrine has been *514adopted and rests upon its analogy to the statute of limitations applicable to lands, and both parties in the present case agree that the effect of the plaintiff’s disability upon the right claimed by the defendants, is precisely the same that it wouldbe upon lands of the plaintiff holden adversely by the defendants, and theif predecessors in title, during the same period. And in our judgment rights to easements acquired by long possession ought to stand on the same ground as rights by possession in lands. The real principle underlying the right, is the same precisely on which the statute of limitations stands. In the first place, it is presumed that one man would not quietly submit to have another use and enjoy his property for so great a length of time unless there existed some good reason for his doing so, and that after allowing it for so long, he should not call upon him to show his right or title, when it may not be in his power to do so ; and in the second place, it is a rule of policy, adopted in support of long and uninterrupted possession. It is important too in another view, that the doctrine of the law in the two cases should harmonize, that the people may not be misled and perplexed by having the law different ways upon subjects which in reason, and upon principle should be the same.
The requisites of a possession by which an easement -is acquired, as generally laid down in the books are, that it should be adverse, under a claim of right, exclusive, continuous and uninterrupted. These are exactly the requisites of a possession of lands to give a title under the statute of limitations against the proprietor. But it is sometimes said that the possession must be with the acquiesence of the owner. But this is the same as saying that the possession must be unmterrvpted. If the owner does not interrupt the possession in any way, he does acquiesce as far as is needful in order to make the possession effectual against him. In the case of lands which are wholly in the possession of a disseisor, in order to make an effectual interruption of the possession, the owner must actually make an ¿ntry on the land for that purpose. In Powell v. Bragg, 8 Gray 441, it was decided, that where the owner of the land, over which another had laid an acqueduct, and claimed to have acquired a *515right by possession upon the land, forbid the owner of the acqueduct from entering upon the land to use the acqueduct, this was such an interruption of the use as prevented the acquirement of an easement right. The owner of the land being already in possession, could not make an entry to stop the effect of the user, or possession, and his act on the land, of for* bidding the other to enter and use the aqueduct, was all he could ■do to prevent him unless he resorted to force, and ordinarily the law does not require one to use force to assert his rights.
In the case of an entry on land to interrupt the acquiring a right by a disseisor, the owner is not required to use force in order to give legal effect to his entry.
It is not necessary to determine whether such an interruption as was shown in Powell v. Ij^agg would be sufficient to stop the effect of a previous use toward acquiring a right by prescription, but the decision is founded apparently on a sound distinction between an actual adverse possession of lands, and a mere ease* ment upon lands, of which the owner himself is in the actual possession.
Under the English statute of limitations, passed as early as the reign of James 1st, it was uniformly held that disabilities, in order to prevent the operation of the statute, must exist at the time the right first accrued.
This statute of James has been the-foundation of similar stafiA utes in this country generally, and though its precise language has hardly ever been adopted, still, the same construction has been generally followed by American courts. The only instance Of so wide a departure from the English statute as to induce a different construction in this respect, is in the state of Kentucky. But the saving in the Kentucky statute is in favor of those “who are or shall be infants, &e., at the time when the said right or title accrues or comes to them.” The counsel for the plaintiff claim that our statute of limitations of 1797, varies so widely from the English as to require a different construction in this respect, and one similar to that given by the Kentucky court to theirs.
The Act of 1797 limits rights of entry into lands, and actions *516for the recovery of lands, to fifteen years next after the right shall accrue to the plaintiff or those under whom he claims. Sec. 10 provides, generally, that it shall not apply to infants, &c., but they shall be allowed to sue within fifteen years after the removal of the disability. It does not say, in terms, that the rights of those disabled when the right first accrued shall be saved, as does the English statute. Neither does it, in terms, save the rights of those who shall be infants, &c., when the right accrues or comes to them.
But the question cannot be regarded as an open one in this state. In McFarland, Adm’r of Burdick v. Stone, 17 Vt. 174, the question came before the court. The action was ejectment to recover lands of which Burdick died seized. The defendant had been in possession more than fifteen years before suit brought claiming title. The plaintiff claimed to avoid the statute on the ground of the disability of the heirs. Two of the heirs wore infants at the decease of their father, and fifteen years had not elapsed after they became of age before the suit was brought, and the plaintiff was allowed to recover for their shares of the land. Two other female heirs were infants when the defendant entered upon the land, and before they become of age were married, and so continued till suit brought, so that they had been constantly under disability during the whole period of defendants’ possession. The statute had not run in favor of defendant when the disability of coverture intervened, but more than fifteen years had run after they became of age, before suit brought.
It was decided that their rights were bound by the statute, and the court held that our statute should- have the same construction as the English, and that no disabilities could be regarded as within the saving, except such as existed at the time the right first accrued. If the plaintiff’s claim is well founded, that the intervening of a disability, before the statute has run, arrests it, and entitles the party to fifteen years longer after the disability is removed to sue, then the plaintiff should have recovered the shares of the two female heirs. They could not bo in a worse condition after the disability of coverture arose, in consequence *517of having been all the previous time under the disability of infancy, than they would have been, if before the coverture they had been legally competent to sue, pr the right had been in some one else who was competent. The real point in the case was the same made here, viz : Must disabilities, in order to be within the saving of the statute, exist when the right first accrues ? — and was fully decided. It was stated in argument by Judge Bennett, that the statute of 1797, was always understood by the courts, and men of eminence in the legal profession in the state, to be different from the statute of James in this respect. Judge Bennett’s long experience at the bar, and upon the bench, entitles his statement to great consideration, but the strictest search has not enabled us to find any trace of such an opinion in our reports, and the case of McFarland v. Stone, where the contrary was decided, was tried by Judge Bennett, and his ruling was affirmed in the supreme court. So far as we have any knowledge of .professional tradition on'the subject, the general understanding has been that when the statute of limitations, once began to run, no subsequent intervening disability would arrest it.
Our present statute of limitations is made to conform exactly to the English, by confining the saving’of disabilities to such as exist at the time the cause of action accrues, but no one has ever supposed that the law in this respect was changed from what it was under the act of 1797. Indeed the change of phraseology has been made by revisers, and for the purpose of making the language more exactly express the meaning as judicially determined.
The decisions in relation to the statute applying to personal actions are all in the same direction. Hill v. Jackson, 12 Vt. We are satisfied therefore, that by the settled construction of the statute of limitations, a disability in order to prevent the operation of the statute must exist when the right first accrues, and if the analogy of the statute in this respect is to be followed, it must govern this case. And we see no reason why it should not be in this particular, if in any, as it stands upon the same reason and is governed by the same policy.
*518The cases that have been cited bearing upon this particular point are contradictory, and no uniform principle seems to have been followed in deciding them. Melvin v. Whiting, 13 Pick, 134, is cited by the plaintiff. It was an action for disturbing the plaintiíP s fishery. The plaintiff claimed a right to the fishing by long continued use or prescription. It appeared that after plaintiff’s possession commenced the title under which defendant claimed, became vested in some infant heirs. It was held that the period of minority should be deducted, but as the plaintiff’s possession, before the commencement, and after the expiration of the disability, added together, made the requisite length, according to the statute of Massachusetts, the plaintiff’s right was held to be established, and he was allowed to recover. The case seems to have been very little examined by court or counsel, no reasons are given, or authorities cited.
Watkins v. Peck et al., 13 N. H. 360, is also cited by plaintiff.
This was a case in chancery involving in controversy the right to draw water by aqueduct from a spring. In this case also, during the use from which the right was claimed, the title had descended to minor heirs, and it was held that this interrupted the prescription. Judge Parker, who gave the opinion, says that such a right by long possession rests upon the presumption of a lost grant, and that it would be absurd to presume a grant, where it was clear that no such grant could have existed.
It would almost seem that the distinction between 'the class of cases where the question is whether there has been a grant or deed in fact, and those where this presumption is a mere legal fiction, was not perfectly clear to so eminent a judge as Judge Parker.
Lamb v. Crossland, 4 Rich. S. C. 536, ie also cited by Prof. Washburn, as supporting the same doctrine, but I have not seen the case.
On the other hand the case of Reimer v. Stuber, 20 Penn. St. 458, where a right of way was claimed by prescription, aud sought to be avoided on the ground of disability, the use began during the minority of the owner of the land, and who before she became of *519age was married, it was held that the time began to rnn when she became of age, notwithstanding the subsequent disability of coverture. If the case stood really upon the ground of a presumed grant, and it could not be presumed because the owner was under a disability, and could not make a grant, it must extend through both disabilities. The case can stand only upon the analogy.of the statute. In that view it is clearly correct.
Mibane v. Patrick, 1 Jones N. C. 23, was a claim by the plaintiff that he had acquired a right of way by use. After the use began the owner of the servient estate became insane. It was decided that as the disability did not exist at the time of the commencement of the plaintiff’s adverse use, it did not prevent the use ripening into a right. The court say “ such being the law as to the statute of limitations, it follows it must be so, in regard to prescriptions also.” The language of Judge Story in Tyler v. Wilkinson, 4 Mason 402, in this respect goes even beyond what we are disposed to hold, indeed disabilities coming clearly within the saving of the statute, would not avoid a prescription, according to the most general interpretation of his language. But doubtless it was not intended by him to bear so broad a meaning. Prof. Washburne in his treatise on Easments says, “ Perhaps the difference in the provisions of the statutes of limitations in the different states, may account for the discrepancy in the decided cases.” But they can hardly be reconciled on such a basis. In both Massachusetts and New Hampshire, it is fully settled, that under their statutes of limitations no disability avoids their operation, unless it exist at the time the right first accrues. The decisions in those states must have been made in entire disregard of the analogy of the statute in this respect, and we think they were made by giving undue importance to the fictitious theory of a lost grant.
The cases opposed to them are in our judgment founded upon much sounder legal reason, and we are disposed to follow the Pennsylvania and North Carolina cases, rather than those nearer home.
This disposes of the principal questions made in the case. The plaintiff claims there was error in the charge in another *520respect; that if they found the right of way claimed by the defendants fully established by'the evidence as to the length and, character of the use, any subsequent application for, and obtaining license to use it from the plaintiff, would not divest them of the right. Such subsequent application for license would be very powerful evidence to show that the previous use was not under a claim of right, so as to give a title, but no claim is made but that as evidence, it was given all the force it was entitled to.
But -the plaintiff claims that it should have the effect of an estoppel, and prevent the defendants from setting up the right, of way they had obtained by the previous use. The claim is put put upon the same ground as that of a tenancy, where if a tenant has been admitted into possession by the landlord, he is estopped to deny his title. But we fail to see the analogy, or any good ground upon which an estoppel could be founded. The charge proceeded on the basis that the jury had already found the right of way completely established. The right of the defendants then was the same as if they actually held a conveyance of the right from the plaintiff. In such case it would seem singular that a parol admission of, the plaintiff’s right, or rather the defendants’ want of right, should operate really as a reconveyance of a vested legal right in realty, which cannot be conveyed by parol. We think it can be regarded merely as an admission to bo weighed against the defendants and as such the defendants had the full benefit of it.
The only remaining point, is the instructions as to the Penniman letter. The letter appears to have been introduced merely as an admission by Penniman of the title of the plaintiff, and his own want of title to any way over the the plaintiff’s land, by his asking permission to cross. If the letter referred to the way in question, it would be important evidence against his right. If it had reference to another place, and not to this, there it was no admission at all against his right to use this way. If the jury found that the letter referred to the way in question, it does not appear that the plaintiff did not have all the advantage he was entitled to from it, and if they found it referred to another place, and not this, then it was entitled to no forco at all as an *521admission. It does not appear to us material how Mrs. Tracy understood the letter, considered in this light. If it was claimed that by her misunderstanding of the letter, and supposition that it referred to this way, she had conducted differently, and had allowed Penniman to use this way,, supposing he was acting under the license obtained in answer to the letter, or omitted to put a stop to his use of it, supposing he acknowledged her right, or that of her son, then her misunderstanding of the letter might be important as explaining her own action. But nothing of this kind appears in the case. The letter was used to show that Penniman asked leave of Mrs. Tracy to use this way, thus acknowledging her right, and his own want of right. If he was speaking in the letter of another place, it was no acknowledgement at all as to this way, even if Mrs Tracy by mistake supposed it was. We find no error, and the judgment is affirmed.