Hane v. Bell

116 So. 2d 590, 270 Ala. 82, 1959 Ala. LEXIS 616
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 17, 1959
Docket6 Div. 980, 980-A
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 116 So. 2d 590 (Hane v. Bell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hane v. Bell, 116 So. 2d 590, 270 Ala. 82, 1959 Ala. LEXIS 616 (Ala. 1959).

Opinion

STAKELY, Justice.

This is an appeal by Sam C. Hane, hereinafter called complainant, from the action of the equity court in sustaining the demurrer of the respondent W. D. Self and also a decree sustaining the demurrer of the respondent J. F. Bell, to the bill of complaint of Sam S. Hane. We shall hereinafter refer to both Self and Bell as the respondents.

Although an appeal was taken from both of the aforesaid decrees it has been agreed between the parties that “only one record shall be made for the Supreme Court on said appeals, which said record shall contain this agreement.

“It is further agreed by said parties that the complainant, the appellant in said appeals, may assign error upon the record on appeal separately with respect to each of said decrees and that both appeals be submitted and considered by the Supreme Court upon one record and separate judgments be rendered by the Supreme Court with respect to the two decrees of the trial court entered herein sustaining the demurrer of the two respondents.”

This case has been before this court on a previous occasion on appeal by the respondent Self from an order granting a temporary injunction. Self v. Hane, 262 Ala. 446, 79 So.2d 549. This case was originally assigned to another justice but was recently reassigned to the writer.

The purpose of the bill as last amended is (1) to enjoin the respondent from unreasonably interfering with the complainant's use of the established private road over land occupied by respondent Self as subtenant under respondent Bell and (2) to obtain a declaratory judgment defining the rights of the complainant to go on the land occupied by respondent Self for the purpose of repairing, keeping and maintaining the road in reasonable repair for vehicular travel.

The court in granting the temporary injunction which we have referred to indicated that the bill might be subject to apt demurrer for the reasons which we shall hereinafter point out. After the decision granting the temporary injunction, the bill of complaint was amended to which demurrers were then assigned separately by the two respondents.

The bill of complaint as last amended in substance shows that the complainant Hane as subtenant of the respondent Bell, occupies the northerly tip of a small peninsula which protrudes northward in the Warrior River. The peninsula is bounded on the east by Hurricane Creek and on the west by a slough of water from the Warrior River. The respondent Self, as subtenant of the respondent Bell, occupies the southerly portion of said peninsula. [85]*85The whole of the peninsula constitutes a part of a larger tract of land held by respondent Bell as tenant in chief under a written lease with the owners.

There is now and for many years has been a public road leading to and from Bessemer, Alabama, to the southmost part of the peninsula. The only land lying and intervening between the part of the peninsula held by complainant and the public road is that part of the peninsula occupied by the respondent Self.

The lease of October 15, 1937, under which complainant holds as sublessee of the original lessee, expressly provides that the lessee shall have “the right of free egress and ingress to said land.”

On October 15, 1937, the date on which the original lessee acquired his interest and under whom the complainant holds, and on July 15, 1952, the road in question was established as a 12 foot access road to and from the northern tip of the peninsula and across the portion of the peninsula held by the respondent Self. The road was established along a defined line 12 feet in width.

The respondent Self acquired his leasehold interest in the land occupied by him subsequent to October 15, 1937. He acquired his leasehold interest in 1949 and any interest he acquired in the land was subject to and encumbered with said road. On the date when respondent Self acquired his leasehold interest in the southerly portion of the peninsula, said road then existed as an open and obvious 12 foot road across such land running along a straight line from the southerly line of the land occupied by the respondent, W. D. Self, to the southerly line of the land occupied by the complainant. The southwest corner of said roadway was situated, towit, four feet easterly from the well located on the southerly line of the land occupied by the respondent W. D. Self. The westerly line of said roadway passes along the easterly line of the dwelling situated on the land held by W. D. Self at a point, towit, six feet east of said dwelling.

In the early part of 1953 the respondent Self, without the consent of complainant, placed two large wooden posts in the road at a point near the northerly line of Self’s land so as to obstruct seven feet or more of the road and also built a flagstone patio to the east of the dwelling on his land, which obstructed six feet of the road and thereby vehicular travel along the established road was blocked. Thereafter the complainant in order to reach the public road in going to and from his land was forced to drive across respondent Self’s land along a .route to the east of the established road.

In addition to the foregoing the respondent Self, for the purpose of vexing and harrassing complainant, has built a large wooden gate across the road as relocated at a point just south of a fence built by the complainant along the southerly line of his land. This gate is not part of a fence. It is simply set across the road so that complainant in going to and from his land is compelled to stop, get out of his automobile and open and close the gate. And complainant further avers that said respondent causes, permits or allows motor vehicles to be parked upon said roadway as relocated so as to block passage for an unreasonable length of time and to unreasonably interfere with complainant’s right to use said roadway. Further, passage over the road has been obstructed by the respondent Self by building a hump or mound in the road at the gate leading from the public road which causes the under part of complainant’s automobile to drag as it passes over the hump or mound.

It is further alleged in the bill that the road as it passes over the land of the respondent Self is worn, washed and greatly in need of repair for reasonable vehicular travel and a controversy has arisen between [86]*86complainant and Self as to the right, if any, of complainant to repair, keep and maintain the road in reasonable repair for vehicular travel. The complainant claims that he has the right, at reasonable times, to go upon Self’s land to repair, keep and maintain the road in a reasonable state of repair for vehicular travel. The respondent Self forbids the complainant to come upon his land for such purpose. It is upon this basis that the complainant invokes the provisions of the Declaratory Judgment Act and prays that the court make a declaration of the rights of complainant to go upon the land of Self for such purposes.

I. In Self v. Hane, 262 Ala. 446, 79 So. 2d 549, Mr. Justice Simpson, speaking for the court pointed out in effect that there was no grant in the lease of a right of way of a particular width and accordingly the right is such as may be reasonably necessary to give the complainant proper ingress and egress to his premises. And further that the use by Self might conceivably interfere with complainant’s right of ingress and egress but it is only an unreasonable interference with that right for which the respondent could be enjoined.

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Bluebook (online)
116 So. 2d 590, 270 Ala. 82, 1959 Ala. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hane-v-bell-ala-1959.