State v. Feitz

ELLISON, J.

The defendant was indicted and convicted for obstructing a public road in Chariton county.

The indictment alleges that Chariton county had adopted the Township Organization Law and then charges that in violation of such law defendant obstructed the road. The allegation of the time of adoption of the law and the time the offense was committed is in these words: “That on the 6th day of November,. 1908, . . . township organization law was duly adopted in said county of Chariton, . . . that afterwards, .to-wit, on or about the 22d day of January, .1908, when said law was in full force and effect in said county,” defendant did unlawfully, etc. (Italics ours.) It will be observed that the dates set out in the indictment make the offense committed against the law in the month of January, preceding the adoption of the law. But it is apparent that this is a mere clerical error in the year of the adoption of the law; for it is alleged that after the adoption of the law the offense was committed; and that the offense was committed while the law was in force. We therefore conclude that the error is cured by section 5115, Revised Statutes 1909. [State v. Burnett, 81 Mo. 119.] The evidence showed the law was voted on in 1906.

Whether the Township Organization Law had been legally adopted was an issue, and one of defendant’s points of defense is that it was not. In this condition of case, instruction No. 1, for the state, 'which purported to cover the whole case and directed a verdict of guilty if the hypotheses therein set out were believed, omitted the hypothesis of the law having been adopted. This, it is claimed, was error. But the record evidence showed, prima facie, that the law was adopted, and nothing appeared to the contrary.

*582Defendant, however, makes the claim that there was not sufficient evidence. It beijig his position that a proper petition and other matters leading to the election should be shown. '• But we-think all that is necessary for a prima facie case is to show by the record of the county court, as was done by the state, the.casting !up arid ■ result' of the vote/ with the certificate of the county clerk arid judges whereby its adoption is shown. [State v. Searcy, 39 Mo. App. 393, 408; Ib., 46 Mo. App. 421; Ib., 111 Mo. 236.] That was a local option .'case involving the sale of intoxicating liquors, and it is ...there held it is sufficient to show the result of the election was'in favor of the adoption of the law and that ■publication of the result wás made. The latter essential to that law is not required bv the statute (art. 1, chap. 168, R. S. 1899) authorizing the adoption of Township Organization Law:

By the ’provisions of the Township Organization Law (sec. 10354, R. S. 1899) the punishment for ob■structing a public roadis “a fine of not less than twenty dollars,” while, by the general road law (sec. 9454, R. S. 1899) the punishment, is “a fine of not less •than five dollars nor more than one hundred dollars.” The instruction on the question of punishment which was given for the state directed a punishment by “a fine of not less than twenty nor more than cone hundred'dollars.” It does not follow either statute. But the error was in defendant’s favor and is therefore mo gtou’nd for- reversal. The instruction should, of .•course, have been drawn under the terms of the towniship! organization statute, which puts the minimum fine •at twenty dollars, without liin.it as to the maximum. The ■instruction was within the statute in fixing the miniinum firie, but was erroneous in putting a limit to the .inaxiirium sum-. The jury assessed twenty dollars, which ■being the least that could be named, no harm resulted.

An examination of the record has satisfied us that the trial court properly overruled the demurrer to,the-*583evidence. The defendant’s farm land was south of and abutted on the road which he is charged with obstructing. This road was shown-to have been a public highway for sixty years or more. Ordinarily-it was bounded on each side by rail fences, and at first it was comparatively level between the fences. But, after years of use 'by the public, 'the actual travelled way wore off and was washed down so as to leave embankments next to the fences, of greater or less width, on either Side; and between the embankments and the actual travelled way were small ditches, thus leaving a comparatively narrow track of actual travel. After being thus used' for a number of years, hedges were grown by the land owners on each side, a little inside the rail fences. These were allowed to rot down and finally to disappear near thirty years agOj leaving the hedges as marking the north and south boundary of the road until defendant, who bought the land on the south in the latter part of 1906, concluded to build a post and wire fence a few feet north of the hedge on the embankment above the traveled way; and this is the obstruction for which he was convicted. There was abundant evidence to show that the public recognized the whole lane, or space between the hedge fences, as the public road, and that it was frequently worked by the public, and that frequently when the main travelled space was very muddy, the side or top of the embankment (or ridge, as called by some of the witnesses) next to- defendant’s hedge would be used. Considering the whole evidence, it seems to us the finding of the jury could scarcely have been otherwise than for the state. And if that in defendant’s behalf were alone considered, it would have sustained a verdict of guilty. Judging by the examination of witnesses and parts of suggestions .made ’ in defendant’s behalf, he seems to think the state should have been required to prove the whole road space was travelled and.worked. .That is a condition rarely existing with the country roads. Again, much is said óf the “ridge” lying above *584the actual travelled space, hut that is also a common condition.

Much was said in printed and oral árgument about whether the road had been dedicated or whether it had become a road by limitation. It is enough to say of this that it is quite certain that it was one or the other, and as either will suffice it is unimportant which it was. We do not agree that there was no evidence of dedication. In the circumstances shown in evidence it may very reasonably be inferred that a dedication was made.

In concluding that the state made a sufficient showing against the defendant to sustain the verdict, we have not overlooked the case of Moore v. Hawk, 57 Mo. App. 495, relied upon bv defendant. The facts in the case differ so widely as to leave it without application.

The judgment must be affirmed.

All concur;