delivered the opinion of the court.
Upon a consideration of the whole record it appears to be conceded by the defendants as a fact that
1. As to the county road, it clearly appears in the testimony that until a few years prior to the commencement of this suit there was a regularly traveled public road across the premises on the line described in the answer for about 40 years. Less than ten years ago the road supervisor changed the course of the highway, raising an embankment for that purpose about 7 feet high across the track hitherto in use, causing the travel to cross the premises in question on a course to the right of the original road and nearly parallel thereto, since which time it has been impossible to use the old way. This establishes an abandonment of the former road at that place. It is said in 1 Cyc., page 6:
“Time is not an essential element of abandonment. The moment the intention to abandon and the relinquishment of possession unite, the abandonment is complete. ’ ’
In 1 R. C. L., page 4, it is said:
“Public rights, such as the easement of passage which the public has in respect of a highway, may be lost by abandonment. * * The act of relinquishment of possession or enjoyment must be accompanied by an intent to part permanently with the right to the thing, otherwise there is no abandonment, and the moment the intention to abandon and the relinquishment of possession unite the abandonment is complete, for time is not an essential element of abandonment. Therefore, in any case where a question of abandonment is involved, the important fact to be determined is what was the intention of the' person whose rights' are claimed to have been abandoned.”
The dedication of the cemetery is evidenced by a deed from John W. Grim and his wife under date of January 29, 1873, whereby in consideration of $1 they conveyed to Alfred Hovingden, John S. Smith and G. W. Dimick, as trustees of Grim’s burial ground, and to their successors in office, a certain tract of land described thus:
“Commencing at a stake on the north side of the road leading from the said John W. Grim’s to Butte-ville; thence in an easterly direction fourteen rods to a stake; thence northerly forming a regular square eighteen rods to a stake; thence westerly fourteen rods to a stake; and thence in a southerly direction eighteen rods to the place of beginning, containing one and one-half acres and twelve rods. To have and to hold the said premises as a burying-ground to the said trustees and their successors in office forever.”
The testimony shows that even prior to the date of the deed people had buried their dead in that ground, and this continued afterward. Later on, most of the bodies were removed by friends and relatives to another cemetery, but it is the undisputed testimony of witnesses who speak from personal knowledge that there are yet bodies remaining buried in the graveyard thus constituted.
2-5. Objection is made to the deed last referred to for uncertainty of description; but in our judgment it constitutes evidence which, coupled with actual occupation of the grounds for the purpose, amounts to a
6. Messrs. Hovingden and Smith died several years ago. The plaintiffs introduced a deed from the surviving trustee, G. W. Dimiek, as an individual quit-claiming to them the land by description set out in the original deed from J. W. Grim and wife to which allusion has been made. In our judgment the plaintiffs take nothing by this deed from Dimiek, for as an individual he had nothing to convey and never had. As trustee he could not be unfaithful to his trust and convey the property for any other purpose than that
The conclusion is that the decree must he modified so as to quiet the title of plaintiffs as against the county in respect to the road as described in the defendants ’ answer, but to dismiss the suit as to the defendants Grim; neither party to recover costs or disbursements from the other in this court.
Modified.