Anderson v. Birkeland

38 N.W.2d 215, 229 Minn. 77, 1949 Minn. LEXIS 594
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 24, 1949
DocketNo. 34,857.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 38 N.W.2d 215 (Anderson v. Birkeland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Birkeland, 38 N.W.2d 215, 229 Minn. 77, 1949 Minn. LEXIS 594 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

Matson, Justice.

■Appeal from an order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial in án action to enjoin defendant from obstructing a roadway alleged to have been established as a public highway.

Plaintiff, defendant, and the Beverend Andreas Helland own adjoining lake properties which comprise the major portion of a H-shaped elbow of land which juts from the south in a northwesterly direction into Forest Lake. Defendant owns the west portion, plaintiff the middle portion, and Helland the east portion of this elbow of land. Defendant’s tract is bounded on the south by Henne-pin county, high way No. 19, which runs in an east-west direction. Plaintiff’s and Helland’s tracts, on the other hand, have no direct connection with the highway, although it has been alleged that an *79 unrecorded deed gives them access to the highway without passing over defendant’s land. The roadway in controversy is a side road that runs northward from highway No. 19 upon defendant’s property for approximately 180 feet, at which point it divides into two separate branches. One branch (referred to herein as the Birkeland branch) swings to the west and then continues northward on defendant’s property to his buildings. The other branch (referred to herein as the Helland branch) goes in a northeasterly direction for a short distance to defendant’s east line and thence upon plaintiff’s property. Each branch terminates with the buildings of the respective tract holder. The major issue is whether the portion of the roadway extending from highway No. 19 up to the. Helland branch and thence along the Helland branch to defendant’s east line exists as an established public highway through dedication by the defendant (or by his predecessor in interest) and through acceptance by public user. The jury found that the roadway had been dedicated, accepted by public user, and now exists as a public highway. A determination of whether the verdict is sustained by the evidence becomes abnormally involved, in that the trial court’s instructions permitted the jury to determine if the roadway existed as a public highway on any one of three theories — (1) by statutory user and maintenance at public expense under M. S. A. 160.19; (2) by common-law dedication; or (3) by estoppel in pais — without indicating on which theory its finding was based.

If the evidence is insufficient to sustain a verdict on any one of several theories upon which an issue of fact is submitted to the jury, the verdict must be set aside where it is impossible to determine upon which theory the verdict is based, unless it conclusively appears that the verdict is right as a matter of law on one or more of said theories. State Bank v. Strandberg, 148 Minn. 108,180 N. W. 1006. In addition to the major issue, we have minor issues as to the effect of undisputed testimony of original permissive use, newly discovered evidence, and the admissibility of a conversation between a decedent and a witness who is one of the property owners served by the disputed road as his only means of ingress and egress.

*80 Reverend Birkeland, defendant’s father and predecessor, was the owner of approximately the western half of this elbow of land from about 1911 until the time of his death in 1925. Defendant, while his father lived, occupied the property as one of the members of the family. Subsequent to his father’s death, defendant, with the obvious consent of all parties in interest, continued to share active possession of the premises with his mother, who had a life estate therein. In 1947 defendant acquired full legal title to the entire property. Plaintiff’s action for injunctive relief was started after defendant in 1946 dug a ditch across the road to prevent plaintiff from using the road in reaching his property.

Both Fred Paulson (the owner of a tract to the northwest between defendant’s and Helland’s) and Helland testified that at the time they purchased their tracts (about 1908 or 1909) there was a rough road in approximately the same location as the road now in controversy, and that it then extended beyond in a straight northerly direction. In 1913, they testified, its course was changed to conform to the present route of the Birkeland branch. Prior to the building of the Helland branch, about 1924 or 1925, all occupants of the three tracts, their friends, tradesmen, and deliverers of merchandise used the Birkeland branch. Defendant testified that his father in 1912 told Paulson that he, his family, and his friends could use the entire road on a permissive basis as long as Paulson owned his tract, but that the permissive use should cease with the termination of his ownership.

Taking, as we must, the view of the evidence most favorable to the verdict and to the findings of the trial court, we turn to a consideration of the major issue: Is the evidence sufficient to show the establishment of a public highway by statutory user, pursuant to § 160.19? We think it is. If for a continuous period of at least six years a roadway has been used by the public, and, in addition thereto, has been worked and kept in repair as a public highway under authority and at the expense of government — functioning through an appropriate agency — the roadway, pursuant to § 160.19, is thereby dedicated and accepted as a public highway. Whiteley v. *81 Strickier, 159 Minn. 145, 198 N. W. 420. It is not necessary that every portion of the road should be worked, nor that any part should receive attention every year during the period. Town of Wells v. Sullivan, 125 Minn. 353, 147 N. W. 244. In 1928 or 1929, Hennepin county regraded and raised the surface of highway No. 19 at its intersection with the disputed side road. As a result, it became necessary to bring the two roads up to a common grade level. This work was done by the county, functioning through its board of county commissioners, by raising the grade of the approach area of the side road. The jury could reasonably find that the work was conducted over a period of at least six years and that it encompassed, not merely the side-road approach area, but the entire portion of the side road now in controversy. The county engineer testified that the side road was in fact graveled and resurfaced for a distance of 500 or 600 feet beyond its intersection with highway No. 19. Sometime thereafter road oil was applied; in fact, surface material was put on the side road prior to the time highway No. 19 was regraded. Upon direct examination, the engineer said that this work covered a period of four or five years. Upon cross-examination, he admitted that it was performed over a period of something like six years and that it might even be a little longer than that. One of the commissioners, who became a member of the county board in 1929, said that the work on the side road commenced in 1928, and that it had been carried on for at least four or five years after 1929. He testified that a row of guard posts had been installed on the side-road grade for a distance of 50 or 60 feet beyond the intersection. The evidence clearly established that the side road, independent of and in addition to any worJc on the highway, was worked and repaired by a governmental agency at public expense. The joint testimony of the two county officials provided an adequate basis for a determination that the work continued for at least six years.

Was there a public user

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.W.2d 215, 229 Minn. 77, 1949 Minn. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-birkeland-minn-1949.