Dodge v. Stacy

39 Vt. 558
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 39 Vt. 558 (Dodge v. Stacy) 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
Dodge v. Stacy, 39 Vt. 558 (Vt. 1867).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

WjxsON, J.

The bill of exceptions in this case presents several questions for review. The ñrst relates to the testimony of Mitchell. The statements of Thomas to Mitchell, as detailed in the exceptions, do not appear to have been confined to a right of way which Mitchell would acquire if he should purchase lot No. 6, or had acquired by such purchase, but they tended to show that the alley was to be kept open for the benefit of all persons who should desire to travel it. [563]*563It seems clear that this testimony was admissible on the ground that it tended lo show a dedication by Thomas of the land in question as a public way. The rumors that Thomas claimed that those on the north side of the alley had no right to travel it, were properly excluded. They had no tendency to rebut his acquiescence, and such testimony is uniformly held incompetent to establish any specific fact, which in its nature, is susceptible of being proved by witnesses who can speak from their own knowledge. The most important questions in this case, arise upon the refusal of the court to instruct the jury as requested, and upon the charge as given by the court.

To determine these questions it is necessary to examine the grounds upon which the plaintiff sought to recover, the defence and the several questions raised by the testimony in the case. The first count of the declaration was for an obstruction of a private way; the second count, which was for the same cause of action, described the way as a public highway. It appears that the plaintiff’s lot, which is adjoining the way in question, was conveyed by Henry Thomas to William Wainwright, under whom the plaintiff claimed, May 27th, 1829, that William Wainwright died in 1840, that his father, Samuel Wainwright, was his heir, and died subsequently in the same year. It also appears that Carlos Wainwright, son and one of the heirs of Samuel, became administrator on his estate, and took possession of the property belonging thereto, including the close now owned by the plaintiff; that Samuel Wainwright left five other children besides the said Carlos ; that the estate never was divided among the heirs, but was managed and controlled by Carlos Wainwright, as administrator of Samuel, and as agent for the other heirs of Samuel, until the 21st of September, 1865, when all the heirs of Samuel and their legal representatives, conveyed the premises now owned'by the plaintiff to Sweet, who, on the 19th of February, 1866, conveyed the same to the plaintiff. ' ‘

The plaintiff claimed that after the conveyance of his lot to Wainwright, by Thomas, the owners of the lot used the alley in get-' ting to and from their premises, under a claim of right, for fifteen years continuously, with the acquiescence of Thomas, and on this ground, the plaintiff sought to recover under the first count of his dec[564]*564laration. The plaintiff’s testimony tended to show that, after the strip of land was left open by Thomas, the owners of some of the lots on the north side of it, used it as they had occasion, as a means of access to the rear of their premises. No evidence was offered by the plaintiff, tending to show that William Wainwright ever, by words, claimed any right to use this strip of land as a way. It is stated in the bill of exceptions that the plaintiff introduced only three witnesses who expressly testified to the use of the alley by William Wainwright, viz : James Mitchell, Carlos Wainwright and Henry IL Bostwick. The case does not show that Mitchell testified to the Use of the alley by William Wainwright, but it is stated in the exceptions that Mitchell testified he had no knowledge of William Wainwright using it or claiming a right so to do. Bostwick testified that he knew nothing about the use of the way in question by William Wainwright, except during about the year 1831 or 1832, and that he did not know that William Wainwright then used it under a claim of right, but that he used it as he had occasion to during that periodi Carlos Wainwright, the administrator, testified that he knew of his brother William using the way, only by having wood drawn there for his own use; that he did not know through what entrance to the way the wood came. Other testimony was introduced by the plaintiff, tending to show that the alley in question, from the time it was first opened until it was closed by the erections complained of in 1852, was constantly kept open through from Church street to Markham’s alley, that it was used and traveled by all the owners and occupants of the lands and buildings lying on the north side of it, and that Thomas, during his life, was aware of such use and acquiesced therein. The defendant’s testimony tended to show the contrary. They also introduced testimony tending to prove that Thomas opened the alley for his own convenience to obtain access to his wash house and other buildings in the rear of his land, and for transporting his fire wood from his wood yard to his tavern house, and tending to prove that Thomas, about the year 1840, stated to William Weston that he owned the alley way, that it was of great value, because the owners of the lots on the north side had no right to use it without paying him therefor. The defendants introduced testimony tending [565]*565to prove that in 1852, when Dorr was preparing to erect a barn on the east end of his lot and over the alley in question, Carlos Wain-, wright, the administrator, heir and agent of the lot, came upon the premises and claimed that the frame which Dorr had prepared, would, when erected, extend four inches on to the Wainwright lot, that on account of such claim the frame was cut off four inches and erected so that the north end of it came exactly upon the north line of the alley, but that Wainwright did not theu, nor at any other time, make any objection to the erection of the barn upon and across the alley, as it was erected, and has ever since remained ; and also tending to show that, at the same time, Dorr built a building on the mouth of and over the alley, on Church street, without any intimation from Wainwright that he claimed any right to the alley, or that it should not be obstructed.

It appears to us that the testimony, as detailed in the bill of exceptions, tended to prove the facts as .the defendants claimed them to have been proved, indicated by the defendants’ requests for instructions to the jury. It is well settled in this state, that each party is entitled to a charge as to the legal result of such a state of facts as he claims exists, and his testimony tends to prove. Clark v. Tabor, 28 Vt. 222. This brings us to consider what kind of a charge the defendants were entitle to demand, and the charge as given by the court; and first in relation to the alleged right of private way.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Vt. 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodge-v-stacy-vt-1867.