Defendant was tried upon an information drawn under Section 2726 of the Political Code, charging him *15with obstructing a public highway in January, 1898. At the conclusion of the evidence in behalf of the State, defendant moved that the jury be directed to find for defendant upon the ground that no legal highway had been shown to exist. The motion was, in effect, granted, and the defendant discharged. The State appeals. That the court peremptorily instructed the jury to acquit, instead of advising them to do so (Section 2096, Penal Code), is not assigned as error.
The questions presented upon this appeal may be disposed of in a few words. The State contends that a legal highway was proved to have been laid out and established by virtue of proceedings conducted in compliance with the provisions of Sections 1809-1822, Fifth Div., Compiled Statutes of 1887. The court below held that there had been an omission to observe the requirements of these statutes with respect to the giving of certain notices necessary to the jurisdiction of the Board of Comissioners. The order opening the road for travel was correct in form, but we agree with the learned judge who tried the case that, in the steps taken between the filing of the petition and the final order, there was a material departure from the mandatory provisions of section 1810, which requires notice of the place, as well as the time, where the viewers will meet to view and mark out the road, to be posted, and that proof thereof shall be made by affidavit. At the tame of the trial there was not on file an affidavit showing that notice of the place of meeting was given, nor was the proof which should have been made by affidavit supplied by the production of oral testimony or otherwise, if evidence other than an affidavit might properly be received. (See Carron v. Clark, 14 Mont 301, 36 Pac. 178.) The notice by the viewers thatthey will meet at a certain time and place is a sort of warning, in the nature of a summons, the office of which is to advise all persons interested of the matter in hand, to the end that they may appear before, and be heard by, the viewers.
It is further contended that the evidence made out a prima facie case of a highway by prescription. The law, doubtless, is that a highway may be established by prescription as well *16as by proceedings taken in conformity with legislative authority (Elliott on Roads and Streets, 133; 9 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law, 366); and that the adverse user by the public for the period prescribed by law as sufficient to bar an action for the recovery of the land so used will establish a title by prescription, which title must be confined to the very way claimed and traveled during the period, unless an attempt has been made to erect a highway by the proper authorities, under color of which the public had acted by using the way for the requisite period. In that event, it is clear the extent of the easement or title is to be measured by “the claim exhibited by the proceedings and by them intended to be established. This is m strict accordance with the elementary principle of the law of real property, which declares that, where there is color of. title, and possession of part is taken under the claim of title,, it will cover the whole, but that where there is no color of: title the right will not extend beyond the actual possession — - the pedis possessio. ’ ’ (Elliott on Roads and Streets, 136, and. cases there cited.) This doctrine seems to be recognized in. Chapter 2, Title 3, First Div., Compiled Statutes-of 1887, and. by Section 1391, Civil Code, and Chapter 2, Title 2, Section. 186, Code of Civil Procedure, 1895. A highway by prescription does not exist unless the proof establishes that the general, public has used the way, without substantial interruption, for the time fixed by the statutes of limitation applicable to lands. The road must be known and used as a highway “common to-all the people” (Elliott on Roads and Streets, 138, and cita tions); and Section 2600, Political Code, adopted in 1895, providing that ‘ ‘all highways and roads laid out or erected by the public, or now traveled or used by the public, or if laid. out or erected by others, dedicated or abandoned to the public,' or made such by the partition of real property, are public. highways, ’ ’ must, in so far as applicable here, be interpreted as a remedial statute, curing irregularities, but' not supplying ■ jurisdiction, where none was acquired, in the creation of the roads, and as recognizing the existence of highways by prescription when they had been used or traveled by the people» *17generally for the period named in the statutes of limitation. It is also doubtless true that if the road had been used and traveled by the public generally as a highway, and is treated and kept in repair as such by the local authorities whose duty it is to open and keep in repair public roads, proof of these facts ‘ ‘furnishes a legal presumption, liable to be rebutted, that such road is a public highway.” (Eyman v. People, 1 Gilman, 4; Board v. People, 116 Ill. 466, 6 N. E. 475; Hall v. State, 13 Tex. App. 269.) There was not evidence of the adverse use of the way obstructed by defendant sufficient to go to the jury. One witness testified that he had traveled the road “off and on” for several years; and another said he had seen the road, and “had frequently passed through there” for 18 or 19 years, and that the obstruction was in the “regular traveled road, ” or ‘ ‘where the road had been traveled. ’ ’ Manifestly this, of itself, is not proof that the road was open to the public generally, and was traveled by them during the period prescribed by the statute. Neither does the evidence show that the road had been kept in repair by the county, or that any money had been expended upon it.
Some suggestion is made that the road is a highway by dedication. Suffice it to say that the elements necessary to prove a dedication of the way in question were not proved. The order appealed from is affirmed.
Affirmed.