Gabbard v. Campbell

176 S.W.2d 411, 296 Ky. 216, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 17, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 176 S.W.2d 411 (Gabbard v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gabbard v. Campbell, 176 S.W.2d 411, 296 Ky. 216, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 142 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

The subject matter of this litigation is an easement over a tract of land containing tbirty-six acres, located in Owsley County. On March. 19, 1901, C. H. Minter and wife conveyed the southern part of their homeplace to one I. A. Moyars. The thirty-six acres of the northern area conveyed to Moyars is now owned by the appellant, Gabbard, through mesne conveyances and the title to the remainder of the Minter tract not conveyed to Moyars has, through mesne conveyances, become vested in the appellees. Prior to the deed from Minter to Moyars a family graveyard was established on the southern part of Minter’s entire tract and at the time of his conveyance to Moyars it contained some graves of the Minter family and, perhaps their relatives, and some deceased neighbors. Therefore, in the deed from Minter to Moyar. there was incorporated an exception and a reservation, the exception being the family graveyard, and the reservation reserved was: *217 “a haulway or road is excepted leading from the county road at Doctor Glass’ to C. H. Minter’s land on the hill. This is only a right of way reserved to C. H. Minter, the title to same is to remain in said I. A. Moyars.”' Thus, the thirty-six acre tract now owned by appellant became the servient estate and that owned by appellees, the dominant estate. Upon the servient estate there was an old clearing upon the top of a ridge traversing it, and after the conveyance by Minter to Moyar the dominant estate owners — in the absence of a definitely described passway or haulway across the servient estate in the reservation — began to cross the clearing on the latter in a diagonal and winding sort of way in traveling to and from the graveyard and the tract upon which it was located, from which firewood was sometimes obtained for the benefit of those occupying the Minter residence (dominant estate). .However, there was never any definite or agreed upon location of the reserved passway. Near the southeastern corner of the cleared field was the southern terminus of the passway as it crossed over the field, whilst the entry of the pass-way as it traversed the cleared field was some fifty, seventy-five or one hundred yards north of the northeastern corner of the field, so that in traveling the pass-way across the field it was divided into triangular two parts by the diagonal route selected by the travelers.

After appellant became the owner of the servient estate, he reclaimed the. somewhat abandoned field and commenced to cultivate it, which he did for some years before the filing of this action, and just before it was filed he staked off a passway along the east side of the field and at the brink of the bluff running down to a public highway, thereby locating the passway across the field on its eastern edge instead of its theretofore diagonal course across the field. In doing so he removed the northern terminus of the passway, as it crossed the field, between fifty and seventy-five yards farther east from where it was previously located, thus making the passway across the field shorter than what it had theretofore been. Neither the old diagonally traversed pass-way, nor the relocated one, was fenced and the relocated one was practically straight, whilst the old route traversing the field was twisting and winding in the general direction traveled by the dominant estate owners.

The latter filed this action in the Owsley Circuit Court against appellant to enjoin him from altering *218 the course of the original passway as it had been traveled, or from in any manner obstructing its free use as theretofore made. The answer recited the facts as hereinbefore so briefly stated, and claimed that the route of the passway which defendant had provided was equally as efficient as the old route; that it was shorter and that the change in its northern terminus of only a distance of between fifty and one hundred yards was not such a material one as to entitle plaintiffs to the injunctive relief they sought. Evidence was taken and the cause submitted to the court which sustained the prayer of the petition and enjoined defendant as therein requested, from which he prosecutes this appeal.

It is insisted by appellees that the only way any change could be made in the route of the passway was by a county court proceedings as prescribed in section 3779a-13 of Carroll’s 1936 Edition of the Kentucky Statutes. However, there seems to be no corresponding-section contained in KRS, and it might be that the section in Carroll’s statutes was repealed by the adoption of KRS by the Legislature as the statutory law of this Commonwealth. But, whether so or not, it is our conclusion that the section, as contained in Carroll’s statutes, is applicable only to passways that are. established by court proceedings in accordance with Chapter 94a of the same edition of Carroll’s statutes, of which the section referred to is a part. It was so intimated by us in the case of Terry v. Boston, 246 Ky. 222, 54 S. W. (2d) 909, when Judge Willis, the writer of that opinion, said: “It may be that the statute applies only to pass-ways established pursuant to its provisions,” citing the case of Gibson v. Porter, 15 S. W. 871, 12 Ky. Law Rep. 817. We are now of the opinion that the intimated conclusion of Judge Willis was and is correct and that the section of the statute referred to applies only to enforced passways which are established by a court proceeding upon due application made therefor. The word “established” is used throughout the statute as descriptive of the passway to which it refers and it is not correctly descriptive of other methods by which pass-ways may be created, since the word “acquired” would be more appropriate to them. Furthermore, it was no doubt in the mind of the Legislature in enacting the pass-way chapter, supra, to provide a means by which the same court that established the passway might also possess authority to later, and upon changed conditions, *219 alter tbe route of such established passway when it could be done equitably and with justice to all interested parties.

So that the case is reduced to whether or not the alteration attempted to be made by appellant (servient owner) in the routing of the passway here involved, is one that the court will prevent at the behest of the dominant estate owner. We are aware that this and other courts have held that where the right to a passway is obtained by contract or reservation, with no described route contained in the contract, or reservation, the parties thereto may locate the route by appropriation and use and when done the right to its continuance as so located becomes vested in the owners of both estates and it may be enforced and protected by appropriate litigation.

But the cases so holding involved more or less radical and material alterations, as well as resulting in the diminution of the rights of the dominant owner. When no agreed upon route has been fixed by the parties and where the travel, pursuant to the easement right, is not confined to particular areas or dimensions, but pursues a more . or less winding course—as the proof shows in this case — we think the law applicable to easements acquired by prescription should apply. In the cases of Snyder v. Carroll, 203 Ky. 320, 262 S. W. 290, and Wray v. Brown, 155 Ky. 757, 160 S. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 S.W.2d 411, 296 Ky. 216, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gabbard-v-campbell-kyctapphigh-1943.