Carpenter v. Cook

67 Vt. 102
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 67 Vt. 102 (Carpenter v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carpenter v. Cook, 67 Vt. 102 (Vt. 1894).

Opinion

ROWELL, J.

This is an action of trespass to land with cattle. The question arises on demurrer to the rejoinder to the replication to the third plea. Said plea alleges that the defendant had a close adjoining the plaintiff’s close in which, etc., and that for more than fifteen years before the commencement of this suit a fence had been maintained between said closes, and that for a like space of time a gateway and a gate had been maintained for the plaintiff’s convenience through said fence to his dooryard, which said gate had all that time been built, maintained, and kept in repair by the plaintiff and the other owners and occupants of his said close, and that said gate, being a good' and sufficient gate to stop cattle, was left open, torn down, and carried away by the plaintiff, whereby and by means whereof the cattle in the declaration mentioned, at the said several times when, etc., then lawfully feeding and depasturing in the defendant’s said close, without the knowledge and against the will of the defendant, erred and escaped thereout into the plain[104]*104tiff’s said close through the defects and insufficiency of said gate so left open and destroyed by the negligence of the plaintiff, and committed, if at all, the trespasses complained of.

The replication alleges that before and at the said several times when, etc., there was a public highway between said closes, and that the plaintiff’s dooryard was contiguous thereto ; that said gateway was in said fence between said dooryard and said highway and on the side of said highway, and led from said dooryard into said highway; that before and at the said several times when, etc., in said plea mentioned, no gate had been there maintained nor kept in repair nor closed, and that along and upon the side of said highway contiguous to the defendant’s close, the defendant did not at the said several times when, etc., keep, maintain, nor have a fence sufficient to stop cattle that were feeding and depasturing therein from escaping therefrom into and upon said highway; and that at the said several times when, etc., said cattle did stray from the defendant’s close into and upon said highway and thence into the plaintiff’s close, and there committed the trespasses complained of.

The rejoinder alleges that if there is a public highway there as replied it is only a pent road, and wholly on the defendant’s close, and if any part of it is contiguous to the plaintiff’s close, it is necessary for the protection of the defendant’s close and crops therein to have a suitable fence between the plaintiff’s close and the defendant’s close and said pent road, and if it is necessary that a gate should be maintained for the convenience of the plaintifF in getting from his dooryard to said road, it is equally necessary and reasonable that said gate should be kept closed for the protection of the defendant’s close and crops therein ; that for more than fifteen years before the commencement of this suit, said gate and fence had been so kept and maintained in a good and sufficient manner on the line between the plaintiff’s close [105]*105and the defendant’s close by the recognition and acquiescence of the owners of both closes, and of right ought to be maintained for the protection of the defendant’s close and crops, and that at the said several times when, etc., it was the duty of the plaintiff to keep said gate closed, and if any trespass was committed as alleged, it was by reason of the plaintiff’s neglect and refusal to keep said gate closed or to allow it to-be maintained and by reason of his tearing down a sufficient gate that had been kept and maintained as aforesaid.

The causes of demurrer assigned are, that the rejoinder is argumentative, double, and hypothetical. It is also claimed that it departs from the plea, and that this objection can be taken advantage of under the general demurrer.

The plaifitiff attacks the plea as bad in substance, for that it does not show a prescriptive nor other obligation on him to keep and maintain said gate. But if this is so, the fact that there was a gate there in the division fence that the plaintiff and those under whom he claims had kept and maintained for the purpose and in the manner alleged, which was sufficient to stop cattle, and which he tore down, and through which, by reason thereof, the cattle escaped into his close and did the damage complained of, makes the plea good, regardless of whether he was bound or not to maintain the gate, for thereby, in the circumstances disclosed in the plea, he became and was a wrongdoer, and the author of his injury, and therefore cannot be heard to complain.

The next question is whether the replication is good in substance. The public highway mentioned therein is not alleged to be an open highway, and as everything is to be taken most strongly against the pleader, it must be taken to-be a pent highway, which fulfils the allegation. It is conceded that the replication is bad if pent roads do not stand like open highways in the law of fences.

The statute provides that owners or occupants of adjoining-lands, when the lands of both parties are occupied, shall [106]*106make and maintain equal portions of the division fence between their respective lands ; but that the owners of lands are not bound to make and maintain fences on the sides of highways ; and that occupied land bordering upon highways shall be deemed the enclosure of the owner or occupant. R. L. 3178, 3179. It also provides that when the lands of two or more individuals are so situated that either is not compelled to make and maintain a fence on the dividing line between their lands by reason of highways lying between, each owner or keeper shall be liable for the damage done on the occupied lands of others by an animal straying from his lands and being taken on such occupied lands. R. L. 3183. Concerning pent roads it provides that the selectmen may allow them to be enclosed and occupied by the owner of the land during any part of the year, and bars and gates, in such places as they designate, to be erected thereon ; and persons wilfully removing any such bars or gates, thereby exposing the lands or crops of any person to damage, are subjected to a penalty. R. L. 3004, 3005. In Walcott v. Whitcomb, 40 Vt. 40, it was held that in the absence of regulations by the selectmen upon the subject, the owner of the land has a right to erect bars and gates on a pent road for the protection of his field and crops if he does not thereby interfere with the reasonable use of the road as a pent road.

Although the statute uses the general term “highways,” in providing that owners of lands are not bound to make and maintain fences on the sides of highways, and does not in terms distinguish between open public highways and pent roads, which are public, but not open, highways — yet, when all the provisions of the statute on the subject are construed together, as they must be, it is considered that the term “highways,” as used, was not intended to include, and does not include, pent roads.

The statute that the selectmen may allow pent roads to be [107]

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Related

Payne v. Gould
52 A. 421 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
67 Vt. 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-v-cook-vt-1894.