Dickensheets v. . Taylor

27 S.E.2d 618, 223 N.C. 570, 1943 N.C. LEXIS 325
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 24, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 27 S.E.2d 618 (Dickensheets v. . Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickensheets v. . Taylor, 27 S.E.2d 618, 223 N.C. 570, 1943 N.C. LEXIS 325 (N.C. 1943).

Opinion

Civil action to remove cloud upon title, heard upon demurrer ore tenus to complaint and upon motion for mandatory injunction requiring defendants to remove certain obstructions over certain abandoned portion of highway over which plaintiffs claim easement.

Plaintiffs, in complaint as originally filed, summarily stated, allege:

1. That subject to a deed of trust to their co-plaintiff, the plaintiffs Dickensheets are the owners in fee of a certain specifically described lot of land in Rowan County, North Carolina, bounded on the west by the east side of "the right of way limit" of N.C. Highway No. 601, on which it abuts for 201.5 feet, and on the east by the "center line of the Mocksville Road (now abandoned)" on which it abuts for 203 feet, and on the north and south by lands of defendants — "together with the right of ingress, egress and regress" over and upon a specifically described strip of land thirty feet in width lying west of the center line of said abandoned Mocksville Road, that is the western half thereof, and extending from the north line of the Dickensheets' lot, above described, in a southwesterly direction 287 feet more or less to the point of intersection of said abandoned Mocksville Road with the N.C. Highway No. 601.

2. That defendants claim to own in fee simple the strip of land last above described freed of "any right of way or encumbrance" of the plaintiffs. And that defendants based such claim on these facts: (a) That in the year 1923 defendants obtained a deed from M. L. Jackson and for a specifically described tract of land containing 2.8 acres, about one and a half miles from Salisbury on the new Mocksville Road, calling for and lying west of that road. (b) That subsequently and in the year 1926 defendants conveyed to George Howard and wife a part of the land so acquired by them from M. L. Jackson and wife, which may be described as a parallelogram, calling for and abutting two hundred feet in width on "the west side of the new Mocksville Road," and extending westerly for four hundred feet. (c) That at the time of both these conveyances the State of North Carolina "was keeping open said road" and continued to do so until the late fall of the year 1941, when N.C. Highway No. 601 was opened and the new Mocksville Road, so-called in said conveyances, was abandoned by the State as a public road in so far as maintenance was concerned, by reason of which defendants claim that the strip of land lying between the center line and the west edge of said abandoned highway reverted to them, freed of public *Page 572 or private right to use it as a highway and that they have the right to close it.

3. That the claims of defendants, as above set forth, are invalid for that: (a) The call for "the west side of the new Mocksville Road," in the deed from defendants to George Howard and wife, carried "the title to the center of the way," thereby vesting in them the fee in and to the strip of land immediately adjoining the lot conveyed to them by said deed from the west edge to the center line of the road; (b) the roadway being then in existence and abutting the property conveyed by said deed, defendants are estopped to deny the existence of an easement or right of way on the part of plaintiffs over the roadway; (c) the abandoned roadway being the only way plaintiffs have for ingress and egress to and from their premises, defendants have no right to obstruct same, and their claims adverse to plaintiffs constitute a cloud upon plaintiffs' title.

And plaintiffs, in amendment to original complaint, and for a second cause of action, briefly stated, allege:

1. That the lot of which plaintiffs Dickensheets are the owners, the same as that described in the original complaint, and upon which they have constructed and now occupy their home, abuts upon the abandoned portion of the Salisbury-Mocksville Highway, which has been a public highway in general and continuous use by the public for more than 20 years next preceding the institution of this action — having been taken over and controlled and hard-surfaced, improved and maintained by the State Highway Commission of North Carolina under Public Laws 1921, chapter 2 — and which provided to predecessors in title of plaintiffs, and now provides to them their only means of ingress and egress in and to their said premises.

2. That during the year 1941 the State Highway Commission rerouted the aforesaid Salisbury-Mocksville Highway, the same being N.C. Highway No. 601, at a point 100 or more feet south of plaintiffs' premises and thereafter abandoned, in so far as maintenance by the State is concerned, that section of said highway — a curve approximately 500 feet in length, upon which said premises abut.

3. That since such abandonment of said section by the State Highway Commission plaintiffs have continued to use and enjoy easement therein, said easement providing their only means of ingress and egress in and to their property, but that defendants, without lawful right or authority, have erected barriers, iron posts and barbed wire across and taken possession of a portion of said abandoned highway, by reason of which plaintiffs as well as others having business over and rights in the free and lawful use of said highway have been interrupted in, and prevented from the lawful and proper use of their premises — which unlawful and wrongful conduct upon the part of defendants has worked and continues *Page 573 to work irreparable "harm and damage" to plaintiffs for which they have no adequate remedy at law — and they pray mandatory injunction.

Defendants, in answer filed, deny: (1) That plaintiffs have properly described the lot which they own, contending that the description calls for the west side and not the center of the road, and that hence they acquired no property right in and to the land covered by the highway. (2) That defendants owned the fee in that portion of the highway from the center line to the west side adjoining the property of plaintiffs, subject to the right of way of the State Highway Commission, and that when same was abandoned by that Commission, it reverted to defendants as owners in fee and entitled to immediate and uninterrupted possession, and that same was no longer subject to the right of ingress, egress and regress either as a private or public road or driveway, and no easement accrued therein to plaintiffs, the public or anyone else, and that plaintiffs have no right therein.

And by way of further answer, defendants, among other things, aver that the front of the lot of plaintiffs adjoins the eastern line of the right of way of the newly constructed and paved U.S. Highway No. 601, from Salisbury to Mocksville, that is, the highway referred to in the complaint as N.C. Highway No. 601, for two hundred feet, the entire width of the lot, and plaintiffs thereby have access to said highway to which an entrance to plaintiffs' lot may be made easily and at a minimum cost, and hence they deny that the abandoned portion of the old Mocksville Road is the only means of ingress and egress open to plaintiffs.

Upon the allegations in the complaint and amended complaint and on motion of plaintiffs an order was entered requiring defendants to appear and show cause why a mandatory injunction should not be granted requiring them to remove all obstructions on that portion of the Mocksville Road which was abandoned by the State Highway and Public Works Commission, successor to State Highway Commission.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.E.2d 618, 223 N.C. 570, 1943 N.C. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickensheets-v-taylor-nc-1943.