Bowman v. Wickliffe

54 Ky. 84
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 5, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 54 Ky. 84 (Bowman v. Wickliffe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowman v. Wickliffe, 54 Ky. 84 (Ky. Ct. App. 1854).

Opinion

On the 5th of July, 1854,

Judge Simpson

delivered the opinion of the Court, which was suspended by a petition for a re-hearing, until the 18th December, 1854, when the petition was overruled—

William Coons was the patentee of twenty-four hundred acres of land, in one body, situated in the county of Nelson. He settled upon this land more than fifty years ago. He had ten or twelve children, to each of whom he allotted and conveyed separate and distinct parcels of said land, by metes and bounds. The residue thereof, except about two hundred acres, which he reserved for his own use, he conveyed to other individuals.

The public road from Bardstown to Bloomfield passes diagonally across this twenty-four hundred acres of land, and the occupants whoresided on that part of it which was most distant from Bardstown, had been in the habit, for forty or fifty years, of using a road that led through a part of the land into this public road. The road which had been so used was not, however, a public road, nor had it ever been so considered or treated. It was a private passway, known, regarded, and used as such. The land through which it had passed was uninclosed woodland, until about fifteen years last past, when, for the first time, the land adjoining the passway, along a portion of its site, was inclosed, leaving the passway open. Other portions of the land have, since that time, been inclosed, and a road left open of sufficient width for neighborhood use. This road has not, at least until the adjoining land was inclosed, had any fixed and certain locality. Its position has been changed, from time to time, according to the pleasure and discretion of the proprietors of the land through which it passed. A private passway, running in the same general direction, has, however, existed for at least fifty years.

It appears that four or five other roads of the same description passed through this same tract of land, and were traveled on and used for many years, but [97]*97were all eventually discontinued by the owners of the land over which they passed, who fenced up and inclosed the land, and thus terminated the existence of these passways.

Wilson Bowman having, by purchase, become the owner of nearly all the land over which the private road first mentioned passed, and also that which adjoined it on both sides, run his fences in the year 1851, in and across it, so as to prevent all further use of it as a passway.

C. A. Wickliffe is the owner of two hundred acres, part of Coons’ patent boundary, which two hundred acre tract is that part of the land which is nearest to the town of Bardstown. He also owns about fifty-seven acres in the boundary of the twenty-four hundred acres, near the other and more distant end of the tract. The passway inclosed by Bowman had been used by Wickliffe for some fifteen years, in passing to and from his two hundred acre tract to this fifty-seven acre tract; and it had been previously used for many years by the former occupants of the last mentioned tract of land, before it was purchased by Wickliffe. .

A petition in equity was filed in this case by Wickliffe vs. Bowman, in which he set up and relied upon a right to the use of this passway. He claimed it under an alleged dedication of the land over which it passed by the fee simple owners thereof to the use of all those who occupied land inside of Coons’patent boundary, and any other persons who might think proper to use it. He relied upon the long, uninterrupted use and enjoyment of it by the occupants of the land and others, as fully sufficient to establish his claim. He prayed that he might be quieted in the use and enjoyment of -it, and that the defendant, Bowman, might be enjoined from inclosing it, or otherwise disturbing his right to its use.

The defendant, Bowman, in his answer, denied that any dedication of the land, of the nature, or for the purpose mentioned by the plaintiff in his petition, [98]*98had ever been made. He alleged that the passway had been used by the mere permission of the owners of the land, who had a right, as he contended, at any time, to inclose it, and thus to prevent its being used as a pass way.

1. A dedication of land to be used aa a private passway cannot be inferred from the fact that the proprietor, for a great number of years, permitted bis land to be bo used, and subsequently conveyed it, covering the passway. '3. The cusKentuckyUal of travciling over without asking permissionof tends ' to repel ITde'dfcaTiVn from the mere fact of unincloscd land being bo nsed.

[98]*98The court below rendered a judgment establishing the right of the plaintiff to the use of this road, and enjoining the defendant from inclosing it, or in any manner interfering with the plaintiff’s right to its use. From that judgment the defendant has appealed to this court.

No express act of dedication is relied upon in the pleadings, or established by the testimony. If Coons, the patentee, had merely conveyed the land on each side of the passway, a dedication of its use by him to his grantees might have been implied from the mode in which the conveyances had been made; but he did riot do that. He conveyed the whole of the land through which the road passed, not reserving any part of it for a passway. Nor does it appear that he reserved, in the conveyances which he executed, a right of way either in favor of himself or any of his grantees over the land thus conveyed. Nor was there any act done by his grantees which amounted to a dedication, or from which an intention to make a dedication can be implied.

Unless, then, a dedication or grant of the right of way can be implied from the use and enjoyment of the r.oad for forty or fifty years without interruption, there is nothing in this case tending in any degree to show that any dedication or grant was ever made.

It has been usual and customary in this State to travel over uninclosed woodland without asking permission of the owner; and considering the extent and universality of this custom, it tends strongly, « not conclusively, to repel any presumption that might otherwise arise, in such a case, from long con-tinned use of the grant of the right of way by the proPretor of the land. The mere use of this road, then, during the period of time that the land through which it [99]*99passed was uninclosed woodland, cannot be regarded as proving anything detrimental to the rights of the proprietors of the land. Roads also are frequently made and left open by the owners of land for their oWn convenience, and the mere fact that other persons are permitted to use and enjoy such roads, does not, of itself, tend to create a presumption of a grant of the right of way by the proprietor of the soil, to them or to the public.

3. To create a presumption of right to the oBe of a pass-way by long use, it should appear that it had been long so used, under a claim of right, and not by mere permission. 4. The fact that the' owner of the soil, himself, frequently changed the position of the road or passway and no complaint made of such-change is presumptive evidence that no right was claimed by others.

The use of a passway, to create a presumption of a grant, must have been claimed and enjoyed as a right, and not merely as a privilege, which the proprietor of the land might have withdrawn at his pleasure.

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Related

Barnett v. Toole
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Bluebook (online)
54 Ky. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowman-v-wickliffe-kyctapp-1854.