Garnett v. City of Slater

Smith, P. J.

— This is a suit for damages for injury to two mules, caused by the negligence of the defendant in permitting a barbed wire fence to be constructed and maintained across an alleged street within the corporate limits of. the city of Slater, whereby a team of mules owned by plaintiff were injured. It is admitted that at the time of the injury defendant was a city of the fourth class, and that the injury occurred within its corporate limits.

The evidence tended to prove that the mules were being driven in the night time, hitched to a wagon, in a northwesterly direction, and ran into a barbed wire fence at a point north of the north end of Morgan street, and where, according to the plat of said city, there was no street or public highway, but that for more than ten years prior to the erection of the fence which caused the injury, there had been an open space extending from a point south of the north end of Morgan street, west to a public road or street, and north to an alley, as shown also by the plat, and that north of said alley the land was unfenced, and that said open space was laid off in lots, and that for more than ten years the public travel usually ran across this triangular open space from said point until it reached the public road running north from the city. That while there was a beaten road at the point where the mules were injured, yet the travel was not confined to said road, but ran across said open space in different directions.

It was not shown that the traveled way from the end of Morgan street across the open lots to the public .road had ever been recognized or claimed by the defendant city as a street.

The mayor of the city testified that he had held that office for some ten years, and that during all that *211lime the city had not exercised any control or jurisdiction over Morgan street beyond the alley where the plat of the city shows that it terminated, except on one •occasion he directed the street commissioner to do «orne work on it north of the alley, but discovering that the city had no right there, he further directed him to discontinue 'his work and to leave the' same in the same condition as he had found it. Outside of this work, there cannot be said to be any substantial •evidence that the city had, at any time, assumed to exercise any jurisdiction over the alleged extention of the •street. It was not shown who was the owner of the ■open lots across which the alleged street projection extended, nor that there had been any dedication of ■the same to public use or any acquiescence by the •owner in the use by the public. The plaintiff had judgment, and the defendant has appealed.-

Under this state of facts, was the city liable for the injury complained of? This depends upon the ■character of the locality where the injury occurred. If it was at a place in a public street which it was the ■duty of the city to keep in a safe condition for travel •day and night, then it was liable, otherwise not. A •street may be shown to be a public thoroughfare not ■only by evidence that it has been formally laid out by •ordinance, but also by evidence of dedication, acceptance and user by the public as a highway. Pierce v. Lutesville, 25 Mo. App. 317; Beaudeau v. Cape Girardeau, 71 Mo. 396; Maus v. Springfield, 101 Mo. 613; Haniford v. Kansas City, 103 Mo. 172. But it is plain •enough to be seen that the place where the injury •occurred was no part of a public street within this rule. But may it not be that under the circumstances already .stated the city is estopped to claim that the locality where the injury happened is not part of the legal highway? It has been declared by a number of author*212-ities that where a municipal corporation has treated a piece of land within its limits as a public street, taking charge of it as such, it is chargeable with the same duties as though it were legally laid out, and in such case it is estopped to claim that such street is not a legal one. Golden v. City of Clinton, 54 Mo. App. 100; Dillon’s Mun. Corp., secs. 1009, 1012, and cases cited to note 2, p. 1267; Herman on Estop. and Res Adjud., secs. 1222, 1223-1226; Mansfield v. Moore, 124 Ill. 133; Veal v. Boston, 135 Mass. 187. And the statement of the rule made in Golden v. City of Clinton, supra, to the effect that: “To establish the character of the locality where the injury occurred as a part of a public street, nothing more is essential than to show that it was in the actual possession of the city and open and used by the public as a thoroughfare at the time.” And this statement of the law has the sanction of many authorities, some of which are cited in that case.

But the serious difficulty here is, that the evidence, instead of showing that the city had the actual possession of the supposed street north of the alley, showed the contrary to have been the fact. The mere use by the public of a piece of private ground in a city as a thoroughfare does not, without something more, impose a duty upon the city to keep such thoroughfare in a safe'condition. There must be a recognition of it or an exercise of jurisdiction over it, in some way by the city, in addition to the public use, before this duty can be said to be laid upon it.

But this does not seem to be the only reason why the locality of the injury was not in a public street. If we concede the plaintiff’s contention that there was considerable evidence of user extending back for more than ten years, still we do not think the judgment ought to stand. This evidence tended to prove that. *213from the north end of Morgan street the public did not travel north to the public road'for ten years within, the lines of Morgan street if it were extended north over the open lots to the public road. On the contrary, it appeared that from Morgan street north the lines of public travel were variant. There was such divergence from the end of Morgan street north to the public road that to borrow the expression of one of the witnesses the intervening open lots “was all road.” Over these intervening open lots people traveled as they pleased, not confining themselves at all times to any definite track. While there undoubtedly was some travel over these open lots for more than ten years, we do not find that such travel was confined for that period within the lines of the alleged street where the injury happened. This is absolutely essential. The law ip, that he who claims an easement over the land of another by uninterrupted adverse enjoyment thereof for over ten years, must show that such adverse enjoyment has been in the same place for that period of time. Elliott on Roads and Streets, 137; State v. Bradley, 31 Mo. App. 308; State v. Scott, 27 Mo. App. 541; Railroad v. Parker, 41 N. J. Eq. 489; Owen v. Crosselt, 105 Ill. 354.

Tested by the rules of the law that we have just indicated, it is manifest that the locality of the injury was not in a public street of the city or at a place where it was the duty of the city to keep open and safe for travel, and, therefore, there is no liability. It must, as a consequence, be ruled that the trial c'ourt erred in refusing to declare to the jury, as requested by the defendant, that, “under the evidence the verdict must be for defendant.” The judgment will accordingly be reversed.

All concur.