State v. Wertzel

Lyon; J.

This appeal presents two questions for determination: (1) Was the highway legally laid out and established? and,' if so, (2) Is the defendant entitled, under sec. 1294, R. S., to maintain his fence where it now is? The only ground necessary to be considered upon which the validity of the order laying out the highway is assailed, is that the award of damages does not specify the names of the owners of lands over which it is laid, or that such lands belong to unknown owners. ■ The circuit court overruled a motion for a nonsuit founded upon such omission, thus holding that the road, was legally laid out. A verdict was directed for the defendant upon the ground that the portion of the highway as laid, which is east of the fence, not having been worked or traveled for more than five years before notice was given to remove the fence, had been wholly abandoned by the public, and ceased thereby to be a highway.

I. The award of damages, made when the highway in ques*188tion was laid in 1874, is informal, in that it fails to state the names of the owners upon whose lands the highway was laid, or that their names were unknown to the supervisors. Sec. 60, ch. 19, R. S. 1858, seems to require this to be done. The description of each parcel of land, and the damages awarded for its condemnation to the public use, are the more important things which should appear from the award. These properly appearing, it is of much less importance that the names of the owners should be stated, and still less that it should be stated that the names of such owners were unknown. The owner has notice of the proceedings which result in laying out a highway, and he is chargeable with notice of the order laying out the same, and of the award of damages. He knows the description of his land, and it is easy for him to ascertain from the award the amount of damages to which he is entitled, although he is not specifically named therein, or although the award fails to inform him that the supervisors do not know his name. We should hesitate to hold that such omission invalidates the order laying out the highway, although there are cases elsewhere which so hold. But, however that'may be, we think the defendant is not in a position to attack the validity of the order laying out the highway in question because of such omission. The acts of defendant’s grantor bind the defendant. Such grantor acquiesced in the order laying the highway, and erected his fence on what he supposed to be the east line thereof. It does not appear that either the defendant or his grantor ever questioned the validity of the order until this action was brought, but always theretofore acquiesced in it as a valid order. To allow the defendant, now, for the first time, to assert its invalidity might work great injustice to the town. When this order w'as made the land over which the road was laid was wild and unimproved, and the damages awarded to owners trifling. Now it is improved, fenced, and cultivated, and presumably greatly in*189creased in value. Should such order be declared invalid, and the public interests require a highway on that section line, the damages resulting from establishing a highway there at the present time would necessarily be very largely in excess of what they were in 1871. Besides, these owners have stood by and allowed the town to expend large sums in making the highway and building bridges thereon without raising any question of the validity of the order laying it out. Under these circumstances we think the defendant and his grantor have acquiesced in the validity of the highway altogether too long to be heard now to dispute it. "We conclude, therefore, that the learned circuit judge ruled correctly in holding that the order of 1874 was valid and established a legal highway.

II. On the question whether the portion of the highway lying east of the fence became vacated by reason of the failure of the supervisors to require the removal of the fence until it had stood there over five years, and the public travel excluded during that time from the east side thereof, it is only necessary to say that we are aware of no statute or rule of law which gives that effect to such non-user of a portion of the road for the time indicated. It may be that had the fence remained there for over twenty years, and public travel been thereby excluded from the east side thereof, there might be such a result. That would be an application of the doctrine of prescription. Whether that doctrine is applicable in such a case is not here determined. A highway may be laid on a section line without a survey and location of the line, or under a misapprehension as to its exact location. It may, and doubtless does frequently, happen, especially in the sparsely settled portions of the country, that a highway is laid upon a section line through wild and uncultivated lands, and the exact location of such line may not be determined for years thereafter. It would be intolerable if a settler on the line of such highway, whose fences encroached upon it, could force the highway permanently *190from the line upon which it was laid, merely because he had maintained such encroachments for four or five years before the town authorities discovered the encroachment and saw fit to take steps for its removal. We do not think the law sanctions any such doctrine.

Neither is the case within sec. 1294, R. S. That section provides that “ every public highway already laid out, or which shall hereafter be laid out, shall cease to be considered a public highway at the expiration of four years from the time when it was so laid out, except such parts thereof as shall have been opened, traveled, or worked within such time.” In the first place, the proofs tend to show that this highway had been traveled east of where the fence stands after it was laid out, and before the fence was erected. If the statute has any application at all in a case of mere encroachment, that fact takes this case out of the statute, but we are of the opinion that thé statute relates only to obstructions to the highway as distinguished from mere encroachments.

It must be held, therefore, that there was no such abandonment of the highway in question as will relieve the defendant from the obligation to remove his fence, if it is within the limits of the highway as laid out and established in 1814. Upon the question whether it is within such limits, the testimony was conflicting; hence that question.should have been submitted to the jury.

III. We are of the opinion that a highway laid out and established through wild and unfenced lands, and afterwards used and traveled by the public, is “ lawfully opened,” within the meaning of sec. 1330, R. S. It follows that the highway in question is within that section, and if the defendant has maintained an encroachment in it, after due notice to remove the same, he is liable to the penalty of sec. 1331.

By the Oourt.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause will be remanded for a new trial.