Long v. Wilson

186 Iowa 834
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 3, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 186 Iowa 834 (Long v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. Wilson, 186 Iowa 834 (iowa 1919).

Opinion

Salinger, J.

1- ilscmutauance: towis°hment.s" An allegation that, at the time 30 years ago when plaintiff bought his farm, that which he now claims to be a public highway was then such highway and traveled, may, for the sake of argument, be conceded to admit proof of anything that will create a public highway, — say, that the strip in question was dedicated for a highway, and the dedication accepted by long-continued use and travel (assuming, now, that mere use by travel will constitute an acceptance). But can the same be said of the allegation made in this petition? It is an averment that the strip alleged to be now a public highway is such highway because, at the time when plaintiff bought, “there was a public highway opened and traveled (on that strip) * and -¿hat gaj¿ pxnlblic highway still exists and has ever since been used and traveled by the public.” The strip could be an “open and traveled public highway” on the day when plaintiff bought his land if, earlier than the time of the purchase, said strip had been dedicated for such highway, and the dedication accepted by long-continued travel (assuming, once more, that such travel could constitute an acceptance). But the strip could not, on that day, have .been “opened” as a public highway if continuous public travel in future years was necessary to make such strip such highway. It follows the allegation excludes the creation of the highway by dedication and acceptance, prescription, or adverse possession, and that the petition is framed on the theory that the alleged highway was made a highway through establishment by the board of super[837]*837visors. It might be said that the averment that “said public highway * * * has ever since been used and traveled by the public” is idle, if the pleader intended to assert a highway by formal establishment; that, if a road had been “opened as a public highway,”, defendant would have no right to obstruct it, if no one had ever traveled it. We think that this part of the plea is intended to present merely that the formally established highway has remained such, and has not been abandoned or vacated. And this construction has full support from the fact that plaintiff addressed much testimony to proving that there had been neither abandonment nor vacation of the alleged public highway.

2. appeal and error: review: scope ana extent in general: necessity to prove allegatlonOf course, a public highway may come into existence without formal establishment. But, as seen, plaintiff’s case is bottomed on the claim that the road in question was formally established. Unless, then, defendant has in some way lost such right, he . ,.™ -, mav now insist that plaintiff was entitled to no relief unless he has proved that the road in controversy was formally established as a public highway. Such insistence but asserts that the decree must be within the issues joined, and that it will be reversed if it does not respond to the issues. And such is a position that the law fully sustains. See Schuster v. Davis, 185 Iowa 143, and cases therein cited and analyzed.

[839]*8393. Appeal and error : review questions of fact, verdicts, and findings: trial de novo. Appeal and error : review : questions of fact, verdicts, and findings: decree not justified by pleadings. [837]*837This is not a case where the right to complain has been lost, because, though the petition pleaded what did not entitle plaintiff to the relief demanded, no objection to the .sufficiency of the pleading was made below. The plea here was unassailable. That one threatens to close a road which has been formally opened, does warrant injunctive relief. The only way to meet such plea as this was by denial. And defendant did make general denial. True, this general [838]*838denial was needlessly, even irrelevantly, amplified. The answer did not stop with denying the alleged establishment of the claimed highway. ' It avers that “no public highway has ever existed along the location described in the petition, either by prescription or otherwise;” that the land occupied by the alleged highway “has never been dedicated to the public or to any person by the owners thereof for a public highway or any other purpose;” that all have treated the claimed road as not being a public highway; that plaintiffs have never claimed of defendant or his grantors “any right to said land or any right to travel over the same;” that defendants “have never had express notice or knowledge that plaintiff claimed any right to said land or the right to travel over the same;” that plaintiff has no claim of right, except a permissive use granted by the defendant from neighborly kindness, because existing established highways were difficult to travel; that to treat the alleged highway as a public highway will materially injure defendant in his property rights; and that plaintiff will not be injured by closing .up the alleged public highway. True, the defendant has denied what is not charged, and defended against what is not urged. But, of course, that does not destroy his denial of the only thing that is charged. In final effect, the needless part of the answer asserts that there are certain reasons why the plaintiff should not have the relief demanded, even if the allegations of his petition were established. Since plaintiff had no right to an injunction unless he proved the formal establishment of the alleged highway, an answer which says, in effect, that he would not be entitled to such relief even if he proved such establishment, does not relieve the plaintiff from proving such establishment. The range of the arguments, too, is needlessly enlarged along the lines of the needless amplifications found in the answer. These enlargements will have consideration in another connection. As between plaintiff and defendant. [839]*839then, the only legitimate inquiry on this appeal is whether the plaintiff has shown that what he claims to be a public highway was created by formal establishment, according to statute. The plaintiff asserts that there should be an affirmance here because the findings of the trial court have the force and effect of a verdict. That is not the law on review de novo. While the findings below have, even in a chancery appeal, some significance, they do not have the status of a verdict. But if such findings did have such standing, or if we took the defendant at his word, a reversal must ensue because the finding of the trail judge is, “I find that the same never ivas laid out or established by any legal proceedings.” What is more, this finding is unassailable. There is absolutely no evidence of any such establishment. On the authority of Schuster Bros. v. Davis, 185 Iowa 143, that should end our review. It appealing that no relief was due on the only allegation- of the petition made the basis for relief, it would follow that the relief given cannot be sustained. The court should not give relief upon a theory not raised by the pleadings. Precisely that was done. The injunction was ordered upon a finding that the conduct of the defendant’s grantor lulled the public into tlie belief that certain “formally established highways were not to be usea, and that the alleged highway would be open for use, and that such conduct worked an abandonment of said established public highway.” This, if it be anything, is the finding of an estoppel, where no estoppel was pleaded.

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Bluebook (online)
186 Iowa 834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-wilson-iowa-1919.