Haines v. Galles

303 P.2d 1004, 76 Wyo. 411, 1956 Wyo. LEXIS 50
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1956
Docket2740
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 303 P.2d 1004 (Haines v. Galles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haines v. Galles, 303 P.2d 1004, 76 Wyo. 411, 1956 Wyo. LEXIS 50 (Wyo. 1956).

Opinion

*415 OPINION

Mr .Justice Parker

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff, Willard W. Haines, in his petition alleged that Walter Galles was the record title holder and Sam and Hazel Baxter were in possession of certain lands in sec. 25, T. 33 N., R. 80 W., of the 6th P.M., Natrona County; that

“for more than 10 years last past, plaintiff and his predecessors in title have had free and uncontested use of a right of way across the western portion of land now occupied and owned by defendants which said right of way was established by plaintiff to allow him ingress [to] and egress from his land”;

and prayed that the court direct defendants to permit the plaintiff the continued unobstructed use of the existing right of way, known as the Haines Road.

At the trial, when it appeared that Galles had no record interest in the lands, the case against him was dismissed. (Accordingly, in our discussion hereafter, we will not consider him to have been a defendant.) The court found generally for Haines and against the Baxters, adjudged that plaintiff was “entitled to a right of way for a private road” across the defendants’ *416 lands and ordered defendants “to cease their interference with and obstruction of the plaintiff’s said right of way and the plaintiff’s use thereof.”

From this judgment, defendants have appealed, insisting that the trial court’s judgment violates the statute, § 48-301, W.C.S. 1945, and the case, Nixon v. Edwards, 72 Wyo. 274, 264 P.2d 287, 293 — which interpreted said statute, referring to it as “the Act.” Such case, dealing with a claim of the existence of a public road by prescription even though,the same had not been officially established and recorded by the board of county commissioners, held the words “highways” and “public roads’ ’to be synonymous and the Act to mean that no roads shall be public roads unless and until they are established in accordance with the Act.

Defendants, in comparing the Nixon case with the instant situation, admit a dissimilarity as relates to the existence of additional means of access to the claimants’ properties. However, they point out substantial identity on the following points:

(1) In both cases, the party claiming the easement of right of way used the same for ingress to and egress from his land.

(2) The person claiming the easement in each case contended that he had used and traveled the road in dispute openly, notoriously, and adversely for over ten years.

(3) The evidence in each case shows that persons other than the one claiming easement had on different occasions used the road.

(4) Neither road was laid out, established, and recorded by the board of county commissioners as required by § 48-301.

*417 Plaintiff’s counsel herein insist that the Nixon case does not control the present decision because Haines is here attempting to show that he is entitled to a right of way for a private, not a public, road. Defendants’ counsel, on the other hand, contends:

“Section 48-301, supra, provides that no roads other than those laid out, established and recorded by the several Boards of County Commissioners, shall be highways unless and until lawfully established as such by official authority. There is no exception in the statute as to private roads or rural County roads. The statute is all inclusive, otherwise most any litigant in attempting to establish a road by user only could claim that it is a private road and thereby defeat the very purpose of this statute.”

Defendants herein apparently overlook two important statements by the court in Nixon v. Edwards, supra, at pp. 288, 293:

(1) “At the close of the evidence in the case, the defendants, by their counsel, stated to the court that they would not proceed on the theory that the road in question was a private road in which they had an easement, but upon the theory that the road in question was a public road”;

and

(2) “Highways are public roads, and substituting the synonymous term ‘public roads’, the act provided that no roads should be public roads unless and until duly established as the act provided.”

We thus find that Nixon v. Edwards, supra, by definition and by specific statement dealt with “highways” or “public roads” rather than with a private right of way with which the instant case is exclusively concerned. Haines in the case now before us makes no reference in his petition to a public highway, a highway, or a public road, and refers only to his own right of way (although he does not designate it as *418 private). The trial court specifically allows him “a right of way for a private road.” Accordingly, we may eliminate from our present consideration any reference to § 48-301, to the case of Nixon v. Edwards, supra, and to other authorities cited by defendants on the subject of public roads, including the case of Rocky Mountain Sheep Co. v. Board of County Comrs. of Carbon County, 73 Wyo. 11, 269 P.2d 314. We proceed then to an analysis of statements made by this court relating to acquisition of easements of private rights of way by prescription.

One of the first of such statements was that of Judge Conaway in Metcalf v. Hart, 3 Wyo. 513, 27 P. 900, 906, 31 P. 407, 31 Am.St.Rep. 122, when he defined an easement as a liberty, privilege, or advantage in land, without profit, and existing distinct from the ownership of the soil. He further stated that claim for an easement must be founded upon a deed or writing, or upon 'prescription which supposes one.

Later, Judge Beard on McIlquham v. Anthony Wilkinson Live Stock Co., 18 Wyo. 53, 104 P. 20, recognized prescription in a negative way by indicating that use of unenclosed private land for pasturing livestock was merely permissive, created no title, and might be terminated at any time.

In Gustin v. Harting, 20 Wyo. 1, 121 P. 522, 527, Ann.Cas. 1914C, 911, Judge Potter stated:

“ * * * The actual and continuous use of an easement, as of right, for the period of limitation for bringing an action to dispossess the claimant, creates the presumption of a grant. * * * ”

More recently, Judge Blume in Coumas v. Transcontinental Garage, Inc., 68 Wyo. 99, 230 P.2d 748, 754, 41 A.L.R.2d 539, in discussing prescriptive rights relating to a party wall, quoted 28 C.J.S., Easements *419 § 5, “ ‘an easement may be created or passed only by deed, that is, by grant, reservation, or covenant, or by prescription, which presupposes a grant’ ”; cited 17 Am.Jur. 936 and 49 Am.Jur. 513; and stated:

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Bluebook (online)
303 P.2d 1004, 76 Wyo. 411, 1956 Wyo. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haines-v-galles-wyo-1956.