Hartley v. Vermillion

74 P. 987, 141 Cal. 339, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 517
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1903
DocketSac. No. 951.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 74 P. 987 (Hartley v. Vermillion) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartley v. Vermillion, 74 P. 987, 141 Cal. 339, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 517 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, J.—

This action was brought to declare a strip of land running north a mile and a quarter to a mile and a half from the county road in Solano County, commonly called the E. R. Thurber road, to the south line of defendant Vermillion’s so-called home place, a public highway, and to restrain defendants from obstructing the same. The answer denied that the so-called road or highway was a public road or highway, but averred that the same was a private road, the property of the defendants, in which the general public had no interest whatever. The court found in favor of the plaintiff, and entered judgment accordingly, and enjoined the de *341 fendants from obstructing or interfering with the said public road; from which judgment and the order denying defendants’ motion for a new trial the defendants appeal. The main point on the appeal is the contention on the part of the defendants that the evidence does not sustain the finding of the court that the road in question is a public road and highway.

The following is a summary of the evidence on the part of the plaintiff: William Lockie testified in substance that he had known the. road in dispute eight or ten years, and has used it and seen others use it. He used it off and on for about ten years prior to 1898, and has been in the habit of traveling over the same since, and while traveling over the road no one ever objected. “I never asked permission of Mr. Vermillion or Mr. Buck, or any one else, to travel that road.” James Lockie, another witness for plaintiff, testified that he had known the road in dispute for eight years and had used it for about five years. “When I traveled the road in dispute I never asked permission of any one. I did n’t know I had to. . . . While traveling it I could see no difference between it and other roads which had been known to be county roads, but it was not quite as wide as others.” B. A. Peabody, another witness for plaintiff, testified that he traveled the road, and that no objection was made to his doing so at any time, and he asked no one’s permission to travel it. It was open, and people seemed to be going and coming, and he supposed it to be all right. Michael Farrell, also for the plaintiff, testified he had known the disputed road for about twenty years; had been over it, he thought, before any of the land belonged to Mr. Buck (defendant). “When I traveled the road no one objected to it, nor did I ever ask any one’s permission to travel it. It was not necessary, as it appeared to me.” R. B. Burton, also for the plaintiff, testified that he had been perfectly familiar with the road -for about twenty-two years, and had used it whenever he wanted to. “I have never asked any one’s permission to use the road this side of Mr. Vermillion’s. I never asked any one’s permission to travel the road between Mr. Vermillion’s upper place and the B. R. Thurber road, and no one ever made an objection to my traveling it. I never asked any one’s permission to travel over the disputed road prior to 1898. I did not ask permission, because those people *342 traveled it, and we were doing just the same as other people were doing.” James Burton testified similarly. I. K. Buck, also a witness for the plaintiff, testified he had been familiar with the disputed road about fifteen years, and resided on it, the second house from the E. B. Thurber road. It passes over his (the witness’s) land. From the so-called Thurber road up to Vermillion’s home place he thinks it is a mile and a half. He says: “No one ever objected to my traveling over any part of the disputed road, and I never asked permission to use any portion of it.” William H. Buck, also for the plaintiff, testified that he was familiar with the disputed road, and had been for something like eighteen years. He had used it as far as his place all that time. His place is on the disputed road, which runs across one end of his land about eighty rods. He says: “I never, in the use of this road, asked or received permission from any one to travel it, or any part of it. So far as it passes over my land, I never gave any one permission to pass over it. I never objected to any one going over, and do not recollect that any one ever asked my permission. I had no other way out to the Thurber road only this road.” W. W. Smith, also for the plaintiff, testified that he is a resident of Vacaville, and had known the disputed road since 1859, traveling over it in the spring and summer of that year. “I never asked any one’s permission to travel it.” On cross-examination he admits that he got defendant Vermillion’s permission to cross his upper place, but says he did not get any one’s permission to travel the disputed road, which did not pass into or over that upper Vermillion place at all. It commenced at the south line of Vermillion’s upper place and ran south to the so-called Thurber road, which is admitted to be one of the public highways of that county. He says he never knew of the public being prohibited from traveling that road until last summer, when the defendants put a gate across it to stop Hartley from traveling it. D. J. Parmelee, another witness for the plaintiff, testified that he lived some distance north of the north end of the disputed road, and has known the said road for about nineteen years, and has traveled the same. “I never asked permission to travel over the disputed road before last summer. That was the time when the gate was put across it as already stated.” Balph H. Platt, for the *343 plaintiff, testified that he resided in Vacaville, and had traveled the road since May 1, 1874. “I never asked anybody’s permission to travel over it. I did not think it was necessary. I thought it was a public road up until a little while ago, a little before last August, as I remember it, and there was never any objection made by any one to my traveling it.” C. M. Hartley testified that he had been the agent for his mother, the plaintiff, and had traveled the disputed road for some fourteen years without any objection from any one, or without asking any one’s permission. The ranch, or place, of the plaintiff of which the witness acted as agent is to the east of defendant Vermillion’s upper or home place, and prior to 1895 he had been accustomed to pass through the defendant Vermillion’s upper place, and thence down to the road in dispute. In December, 1895, he was served with a notice by Vermillion thereafter not to pass over said land. The notice says: “The land referred to is situate in Vaca Township, Solano County, California, and is bounded on the north by land of Hatch, and on the east by land of Hartley, on the south by land of F. II. Buck, and on the west by land of F. B. MeKevitt and land of F. H. Buck, and known as the Vermillion ranch or farm.”. This tract does not include any of the disputed road, but lies to the north of it. This witness also produced an agreement entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant Buck for the sale of a strip of land on the northerly line of defendant Buck’s tract above referred to, for a right of way out to the disputed road to the south of the defendant Vermillion’s gate, and south of the defendant Vermillion’s tract described in the notice above. Part of the consideration of this strip for a right of way was the sale by plaintiff to Buck of about forty acres of land joining Buck’s tract at a reduced price.

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Bluebook (online)
74 P. 987, 141 Cal. 339, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartley-v-vermillion-cal-1903.