Cleaves v. Braman

68 A. 857, 103 Me. 154
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 11, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 68 A. 857 (Cleaves v. Braman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleaves v. Braman, 68 A. 857, 103 Me. 154 (Me. 1907).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

These are actions on the case for obstructing the plaintiff’s right of way. Dwight .Braman the defendant in the action first named is the real defendant in all the other actions, the acts complained of in those cases having been committed under his direction. By agreement the four cases were tried together.

Some years prior to the commencement of these actions, the plaintiff had acquired title to certain lots of land at Sullivan Harbor, Maine, lying north of the county road, comprising what was known as the Hotel Bristol Lot or the Hotel Cleaves Lot, and also as appurtenant to these lots "A right of way for all purposes of a way over a piece of land forty feet wide in every part lying easterly of and adjoining said lots and extending from the northeasterly corner of the last described lot to the country road.” Thus the plaintiff’s property is bounded on the south by the county road and on the east by the piece of land in question forty feet in width on which he has a right of way. His house is situated about thirty feet from the dividing line between his lot and the forty feet strip.

The fee of this forty feet strip of land known as " the avenue ” or " the boulevard ” was then and has since continued to be in the defendant Braman subject to the easement above described in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant Braman’s property known as the Manor Inn, is situated at the northerly end of this forty feet strip at a distance of about 160 feet from the county road.

August 13, 1906, Braman and the other defendants erected within the limits of this forty feet avenue and on either side of it a fence of woven wire attached to cedar posts four feet in 'height with a top rail of cedar poles. On the westerly side this fence is continuous along the entire front of the plaintiff’s property with the exception of an opening therein about fourteen feet in width nearly opposite the rear end of the plaintiff’s lot.

At the southerly end of the forty feet avenue near the line of the county road are two stone pillars about fourteen feet"1 apart with two short sections of fence connecting each of them at " an angle ” [157]*157with the southerly end of the fence on either side of the forty feet avenue. A passageway fourteen feetpn width is thus afforded from the highway northerly over the avenue.

The erection of this fence on the westerly side of the forty feet strip is the act of obstruction complained of in these suits. The situation may be approximately represented by the following diagram :

[158]*158At the trial the defendant contended that he was bound only to leave a convenient way for the plaintiff to pass in from and out upon the county road; also that he was bound only to leave a convenient way for the plaintiff to pass back and forth from his own land to or from the forty feet strip.

Upon the latter point the presiding Justice instructed the jury as follows : -"But in this case, Mr. Cleayes owns the land on the side of the forty foot strip, not at the end, and the forty foot strip is right next to his land; they are coterminous; they come right together; so that Mr. Cleaves not only has the county road on one side of his lot, but he has a right of way on the forty foot strip on the east side of his lot. Therefore, I rule to you, and instruct you, that Mr. Cleaves, had a right of access to this forty foot strip from his land and a right of access to his land from the forty foot strip for the whole length of his eastern line north and south; that is, he could get on to that forty foot strip from whatever part of his eastern line he saw fit, and he could leave that forty foot strip to get on to his land over the eastern line at any point where he saw fit, and where it was possible to do so. If there was any place along there where it was not possible to do that in the state of nature, then his right would not extend to that part. If by reason of some ravine or some ledge on the line he could not get across the ravine or over the ledge, he could not claim a right to pass on to the forty foot strip over such ledge or ravine, but must content himself with where it was feasible. So, then, wherever feasible, from the north end of his' eastern line to the south end of it, down to the county road, Mr. Cleaves had a right to pass on to that forty foot strip, and, in going on the forty foot strip from the county road, he had a right to pass on to his own land wherever feasible and he saw fit.”

At the trial the plaintiff testified as follows in reply to questions by his counsel:

Q. What use do you make of your house? Is it simply a dwelling or do you use it for some other purpose ?

A. No sir, we run it as a summer hotel, a public hotel, a boarding house; keep summer people there; transient people.

[159]*159Q. Did people leave your hotel on account of the fence?

A. Yes, I think there was.

Q. Whether when they left, at the time of leaving, they stated that they were leaving on account of the fence.

A. Yes, sir.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in each case and the cases come to the Law Court on exceptions to the admission of the testimony above stated and to the foregoing instructions to the jury. The defendant also presents a motion to set aside the verdicts as against evidence.

The exceptions.

1. In that part of the charge to which exceptions were taken, the Justice presiding instructed the jury that the plaintiff "had a right of access to the forty foot strip from his land, and a right of access to his land from the forty foot strip for the whole length of his eastern line north and south; that is he could get on to that forty foot strip from whatever part of his eastern line he saw fit and where it was possible to do so : . . . where-ever feasible and he saw fit.”

It appears from the copy of the entire charge, which is made a part of the bill of exceptions, that the jury had been previously instructed as follows : “He has a right of way over that strip ; not merely a personal right of way that he himself can use, and nobody else, but a right of way as appurtenant to his hotel lot, his property there, his house ; and that gives him the right that this right of way may be used by himself, his family, his servants, or his guests at the house, it being appurtenant to his property. Where his property goes that right goes with it. He is not entitled to use the whole strip unless necessai’y for the purposes of a way. If Mr. Dwight Braman leaves him a reasonable right of way within his rights, he cannot complain because other parts of that forty foot strip are used by other people or used in some other way. If Mr. Cleaves owned the Manor Inn at the north, at the end of this forty foot strip, and the right of way was appurtenant to the Manor Inn, then all that Mr. Cleaves would have would be a right of passage from the Manor Inn down through this forty foot strip to the coun[160]*160ty road ; not a right of way forty feet wide, but a reasonable width for proper, reasonable use as a way. It might be ten feet wide, it might be twenty feet wide, according to the purposes for which he desired to use it. If it was only for foot passengers, perhaps a way five or ten feet wide would be sufficient; if for heavy teaming, why wider. Then, if that were the case, and you should find that after all that had been done by Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 A. 857, 103 Me. 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleaves-v-braman-me-1907.