Barnwell v. Magrath

26 S.C.L. 174
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 15, 1841
StatusPublished

This text of 26 S.C.L. 174 (Barnwell v. Magrath) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnwell v. Magrath, 26 S.C.L. 174 (S.C. Ct. App. 1841).

Opinion

Curia, per

Earle.

The verdict of the jury has established, that the plaintiff had a right to the private way which he claimed. It is not material to the determination of the question, made on the motion for a new trial, to inquire how the right was first acquired. The agreement between Col. Shubrick, under whom plaintiff derives title, and the three persons

who then owned the premises now held by the defendant, first *gave rise to the way in question ; and is supposed to have been a dedication of it to the public. But as the attempt to build up the village of Belvidere proved abortive, there was no public to acquire the right of [117]*117way there, by actual use, which was confined to the covenanters themselves, and those claiming under them. The use was strictly private, and seems to have been continuous for more than twenty years. The land on which the way lies, belonged to Shubrick. It is not the case of a private way over another’s land, and of an obstruction by the owner. Shubrick dedicated the way, or granted the right to use it, to Edwards, Grant and Simons, from whom the defendant derived title, and to all others, as the street or road of Belvidere. The plaintiff derives title from Shubrick, to a portion of the, same lands, composing Belvidere, to which the way was appurtenant, and may be said, therefore to have the right of way, by express grant, or by necessary implication. We cannot suppose the absurdity in a legal point of view, that Shubrick, by granting to others a right of way, should deprive himself, and those holding under him, of the right to use the way.

See State vs. Peterst 7 Rich. 393. An.

The defendant’s title deeds and accompanying plats demonstrate, not only that the way is not over his soil, but that the existence of it has been admitted by those under whom he claims, as well as by himself. The Court is therefore satisfied there is abundant evidence to sustain the plaintiff’s right of way.

This right, however, is supposed to have been extinguished by a long continued obstruction, and as the defendant’s gate was put up on the way in 1829, which was an appropriation of it to himself, and a denial of a right to others to pass over it, that the plaintiff’s right of action was likewise gone. No doubt a right of way may be extinguished in several modes; and especially the erection of a permanent obstruction, which necessarily hinders the exercise of the right, would operate to annihilate it.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.C.L. 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnwell-v-magrath-scctapp-1841.