Gore v. Blanchard

118 A. 888, 96 Vt. 234, 1922 Vt. LEXIS 152
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 24, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 118 A. 888 (Gore v. Blanchard) 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
Gore v. Blanchard, 118 A. 888, 96 Vt. 234, 1922 Vt. LEXIS 152 (Vt. 1922).

Opinion

Slack, J.

The action is tort to recover damages which the plaintiff claims to have suffered from not being allowed to use [237]*237a certain way, which he claims was a public or common way, during the winter of 1920-21. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the court, on motion of defendant, directed a verdict in his favor to which the plaintiff saved an exception. The plaintiff urges several reasons why the case should have been submitted to the jury. His chief claim is that as against the land owner, the defendant, the public had acquired the right, by dedication and by prescription, to use the way in controversy.

The plaintiff’s evidence fairly tended to establish these facts: There is a pond in the town of Pownal which covers from twenty-five to forty acres. In part, but to what extent did not appear, it is caused by a dam maintained at the outlet, which is at the north end. A highway known as the East Road, hereafter referred to as the road, runs along the east shore, .and the claimed way, hereafter referred to as the way, extends west from the road to the pond. At the point where the way is located, the distance from the road to the pond, when the water is at its usual height, is about two rods, although at times the water is up to within a few feet of the road. The land between the pond and the road from the outlet to a point south of the way varies in width from eight or ten feet to two rods. So far as appears, this land never was fenced previous to about 1916. The land over which the way extends is comparatively smooth and level, but the land immediately north of it to the outlet is steep, stony, and covered with bushes, and is unfit for cultivation or pasture. People living in the vicinity of the pond have cut ice on it for the last twenty-five to fifty years. The ice so cut has been taken from the pond over four different routes, including- the way in question, the route used depending, apparently, upon the choice of the person using it. The way in question is smoother and more level than any of the other routes, and was more convenient, in all ways, for most of the people who have taken ice from the pond. Many people have drawn ice over this way each winter during the time above mentioned, and some of them have used it for that purpose continuously for more than fifteen years, without asking permission from any one. On a few occasions logs have been hauled over this way, and it has sometimes been used by fishermen and others who were going to the pond. One Gardner owned the land now owned by defendant from April, 1915, to. September, 1917. When he bought it there was a fence on [238]*238the west side of the road to a point about twenty feet south of the way, but no fence from the road to the pond. He extended the fence north along the road about twenty feet and built a fence from the north end of the extension to the pond. The latter fence is the south boundary of the way.

There was no record evidence of the defendant’s title, but witnesses testified that Kimball, Hodge, Michaels, Thompson, Gardner, and the defendant, in the order stated, owned, or occupied, the defendant’s land during the time covered by the use shown. When.or how long Kimball owned it did not appear, neither did it appear when Hodge’s ownership began. Michaels bought of Hodge, he thought, about December 22, 1911, and owned it over a year, .when he sold to Thompson. The latter sold to Gardner in April, 1915, and he sold to defendant in September, 1917. Hodge, Michaels, and Gardner had actual knowledge of the use made of the way. What knowledge Kim-ball and Thompson had of that fact, if any, did not appear, neither did it appear where they lived or what opportunity they had to acquire such knowledge. Michaels testified that he did not know where his boundaries were and did not know that the way was on his land.

Gardner testified that he knew people were accustomed to use the claimed way for the purpose of getting ice, and never objected to it, that there was no particular road that they drove over from the pond to the highway, that “they drove just where they had a mind to, coming off the pond to the road, to the highway, ’ ’ that he built the fence south of the way where he did so that people could use the way and intended to have them use it, but that he did not know of any right of way over his land from the pond to the road and did not know that people claimed the right to drive there. There was no direct evidence that any of the users of this way acted under a claim of right, and it is not claimed that it was ever adopted or in any way recognized by the town officials. In February, 1919, the defendant closed the way of stringing wire from the north end of the fence west of the road to a post on the north side of the way.

A dedication is the setting apart of land for public use. It may be express or implied. It is not claimed that there was an express dedication of the way in controversy, but it is claimed that the evidence of user and the conduct and [239]*239testimony of Gardner tended to show an implied dedication. An implied dedication is one arising, by operation of law, from the acts of the owner. It need not be evidenced by any writing, nor, indeed, by any form of words, oral or written, but may be established by evidence of conduct, and in many ways, provided the intention of the owner, which is the foundation and life of every dedication, clearly appears. 8 R. C. L. 890. “It is not a trivial thing to take another’s land” without compensation, “and for this reason the courts will not lightly declare a dedication to public use. * * * An intention to dedicate upon the part of the owner must be plainly manifest.” City and County of San Francisco v. Grote, 120 Cal. 62, 52 Pac. 128; Attorney General v. Lakeview Land Company, 143 Ala. 291, 39 So. 303. And when the conduct of the owner, alone, is relied on to establish intention it must be convincing and unequivocal, indicating, by plain implication, a purpose to create a right in the public to use the land adversely to him, and as of right. 8 R. C. L. 890. This, however, does not mean a secret intent, but an intent expressed in the visible conduct and open acts of the owner. The public, as well as individuals, have a right to rely on the conduct of the owner as indicative of his intent. 18 C. J. 53.

Long acquiescence in user by the public, under certain circumstances, is evidence of an intent to dedicate land to public use. It is said in Knight v. Heaton, 22 Vt. 480, that “It is every day’s practice, to presume a dedication of land to the public use from an acquiescence of the owner in such use.” See also County of Bennington v. Town of Manchester et al., 87 Vt. 555, 90 Atl. 502. But a dedication will not be presumed from user, alone; unless the attending circumstances are such as to clearly indicate an intent on the part of the owner to devote the property to public use.

The security and certainty of the title to real estate are among the most important objects of the laws of .any civilized community. Around it the law has thrown certain solemnities and formalities so that the fact may be known and read of all men. "What a man once had he is not presumed to have parted with, but the facts must be shown beyond conjecture. Hogue v. City of Albina, 20 Or. 182, 25 Pac. 386, 10 L. R. A. 673; Portland Ry. Light & Power Co. v. Oregon City, 85 Or. 574, 166 Pac. 932; City and County of San Francisco v. Grote, supra; Cooper [240]*240v. Monterey County, 104 Cal. 437, 38 Pac. 106; State

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Bluebook (online)
118 A. 888, 96 Vt. 234, 1922 Vt. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gore-v-blanchard-vt-1922.