Easter v. Overlea Land Co.

99 A. 893, 129 Md. 627, 1917 Md. LEXIS 85
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 10, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 99 A. 893 (Easter v. Overlea Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Easter v. Overlea Land Co., 99 A. 893, 129 Md. 627, 1917 Md. LEXIS 85 (Md. 1917).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this ease is from a decree of the Circuit. Court for Baltimore County dissolving an injunction and dismissing the bill of complaint of the appellants.

The bill alleges that the plaintiffs are the owners of a “tract of land on the Bel Air road,” in Baltimore County, “known as Fairlee,” which they acquired by deed from John Marx in 1900; that “nearly seventy years ago a road was laid out along the western boundary of said tract by one Job German for convenient access to his lands from the Bei Air road, his said lands adjoining the tract now owned” by the plaintiffs, “on the north;” that “ever since said road was laid out, it has been used by the predecessors” of the plaintiffs “in the title to the tract now known as 'Fairlee’ ” and by the public generally, “and because of the general, unobstructed and continuous user of said road for more than twenty years, it has become a public road;” that “shortly after1 the ácquisition by them of the tract aforesaid, the plaintiffs laid off a portion thereof in lots of convenient size for sale as building lots;” that some of the lots front on said road which has been used continuously by the purchasers of the lots, and by the plaintiffs as the owners of the “remaining portion of said tract bordering thereon” as the “only convenient means of access to that portion of the tract;” that recently the defendant, the Overlea Land Company of Baltimore County, “claiming to own the aforesaid road and disregarding the rights • of” the plaintiffs and the purchasers of the lots bordering on said road, “wrongfully - aud against the protest of the plaintiffs, erected a wire fence along the east side of said road, completely shutting off the plaintiffs from *629 said road and depriving them from access thereto;” that although the plaintiffs protested and caused the fence to he removed, the defendant has threatened and is now prepared “'to re-erect said fence;” that the value of the plaintiffs’ tract will be seriously and permanently injured by the plaintiffs being deprived of the use of said road, “there being no other convenient means of access to the * * * portion of said tract fronting” thereon, and that the threatened trespass of the defendant is not “susceptible of adequate compensation in the ordinary course of law, hut will canse irreparable damage and injury,” etc. The bill prayed that the defendant be enjoined “from erecting said fence upon the road aforesaid or in any manner interfering with the use of said road” by the plaintiffs, and for general relief. A preliminary injunction was granted as prayed. The defendant answered the hill under oath denying that the road in question is a public road, and that it had been used ever since it was laid out by the plaintiffs and their predecessors in title and by the public generally as alleged in tbe bill. The answer admits that the defendant erected a fence on the east side of the road, and alleges that the road was laid out by Henry Lange “for access to his property,” as a private road for his use and the use of his heirs and assigns, and that the defendant acquired the property of the said Henry Lange and the strip of land used as a roadway in 3901, and is in exclusive possession thereof; that those under whom the plaintiffs claim never used the road and never claimed the right to do so, hut that they and the plaintiffs always used another road running through their own property to the Bel Air road. The answer concludes with a prayer that the injunction be dissolved and the hill dismissed.

The motion to dissolve the injunction was heard on the bill, answer and proof, and on the 12th of July, 1913, the Court passed an order continuing the injunction and retaining jurisdiction “until after the question whether the road in controversy is a public road shall have been determined by a *630 Court of law,” and requiring the plaintiffs for the purpose of having said question determined to “proceed in a court of law within thirty days,” etc. On the 28th of April, 1916, the defendant filed in the Court below a petition stating that the plaintiffs had instituted a suit against the defendant in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County and that the case had resulted in a judgment for the defendant which judgment had been affirmed by this Court, and thereupon the Court below passed the decree, dissolving the injunction and dismissing the bill, from which this appeal was taken.

It is apparent from the above reference to the bill and answer, that the vital issue of fact raised by the pleadings in this case is whether the road in question is a public road. As the motion to dissolve the injunction was heard on the bill, answer and proof, the burden was on the plaintiffs to establish by a clear preponderance of proof that it was a public highway. Miller’s Equity Procedure, sec. 604; Voshell v. Hynson, 26 Md. 83; Neurath v. Hecht, 62 Md. 221. In order to meet, that burden it was incumbent upon the plaintiffs to show an uninterrupted user of the road by the public for at least twenty years. Day v. Allender, 22 Md. 511; Thomas v. Ford, 63 Md. 346; Kennedy v. Cumberland, 65 Md. 514.

The bill alleges that the road was “laid out” by Job German “for a convenient access to his lands from the Bel Air road,” while the answer avers that it was laid out by Henry Lange as a private road to his property, for his use and the use of his heirs and assigns. The evidence shows that the narrow strip of land, fifty-five and four-tenths perches long and one perch wide,' running from the Bel Air road to the land belonging to Job German, on which the road was located, was conveyed by James Cullimore and wife in 1842 to Job German. In 1859 Job German conveyed his. property, containing, about ninety-four acres of land, and also the strip of land on which the road was located to James A. Clark, and in 1862 James Clark and wife conveyed the sa'me property *631 and the strip of land mentioned to Henry Lange. In 1901 Henry Lange’s widow, and his two daughters to whom the niuefy-four acres and strip- of land were devised, conveyed them to the defendant. It is therefore cle-ar that the road was opened or laid out in the first instance, hy either Job German or Henry Lange, as a private road or way from the Bel Air road to the land owned hy German and subsequently conveyed to Lange. The evidence also- shows that the road in question, as originally located, ran from the Bel Air road to the dwelling house on the German or Lange property. Joseph German, the brother of Job- German, owned the adjoining property, and there was a road or1 way, through bars or gates, near tbe buildings on the Job- German property, to a road that led to the dwelling of Joseph German, from which there was a private road to- the Harford road. The ro-ad from the Bel Air road to the Job German o-r Lange property was called Lange’s lane, and the road from Joseph, German’s! property to the Harford road was called German’s, lane. Sometime after he acquired the Job German property, Henry Lange changed the road connecting Lange’s lane and German’s lane hy making a new road over one of his fields-, o-n which there were also bars or gates.

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Bluebook (online)
99 A. 893, 129 Md. 627, 1917 Md. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/easter-v-overlea-land-co-md-1917.