Mackey v. Weakley

439 S.W.2d 219, 1969 Mo. App. LEXIS 722
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 3, 1969
DocketNo. 33147
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 439 S.W.2d 219 (Mackey v. Weakley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mackey v. Weakley, 439 S.W.2d 219, 1969 Mo. App. LEXIS 722 (Mo. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

LACKLAND H. BLOOM, Special Commissioner.

William B. Weakley, defendant, has appealed from a 'judgment of the Circuit Court of Pike County decreeing that a certain triangular piece of property, which defendant possesses along with adjoining property under a contract to purchase, is a public road and enjoining defendant “from interfering with the reasonable use of this road by * * * the public in general and any person desiring to use the same” and ordering defendant “to clear the roadway of any and all obstructions and the fence constructed therein.”

Ayers Oil Company of Pike County, although named as a defendant, filed no pleadings, did not participate in the trial, and was found by the court to be in default. No relief was sought by either party against that defendant and the court did not enter any judgment as to it. Defendant Weakley alone has appealed from the judgment.

Although a final judgment to be ap-pealable must dispose of all the parties of the action, we will on the record before us assume that Ayers Oil Company of Pike County is no longer a party to this action and that the court intended to dismiss the action as to it.

Plaintiff,1 a resident of Pike County, sought a decree declaring a portion of a certain tract of land allegedly owned by defendant Weakley to be a public road and sought an injunction enjoining defendant from interfering with the reasonable use of the road by the plaintiff and the public in general and any person desiring to use the same. Plaintiff alleged that the road had been maintained by the City of Clarks-ville as a public street for more than one hundred years and was used for many years by plaintiff and the public in general as a means of ingress and egress to various tracts of land along the road and at the [221]*221eastern end thereof until defendant undertook to build a fence along the western edge of the roadway for a considerable distance, both in a north and south and east and west direction, thereby partially obstructing the roadway. It is alleged that said use was open, exclusive, notorious, adverse and continuous and was never interfered with until defendant blocked a part of the road. Plaintiff’s petition concedes the road is not impassable but alleges that a major part of the road at the western end has been obstructed by the fence constructed by defendant.

The tract of land in question, of which the triangular strip is a part, is located at the intersection of two roads near the southern boundary of the City of Clarks-ville. State Highway 79 borders the tract on the west, the gravel road in question dead ends at Highway 79 from the east and borders the tract on the south. Defendant’s property is bordered on the east by railroad tracks of the C. B. & Q. Railroad. The public road proceeds eastward from Highway 79 to the C. B. & Q. tracks in the City of Clarksville, crosses the tracks, and continues eastwardly outside the City of Clarksville through bottom lands to the Mississippi River.

At the start of the trial the parties were of the opinion that defendant Weakley owned the property in question. However, during the trial it developed that defendant was in fact purchasing the property from one R. B. Pappenfort under a contract of sale which had been entered into in the summer of 1964. Possession of the property had been delivered to defendant on that date and it has been in his exclusive possession ever since, although no deed transferring title has passed. Defendant, having admitted ownership in his answer, was permitted by the court to amend the answer in conformity with the evidence.

The entire tract being purchased by defendant was once owned by Standard Oil Company. It is not clear as to when Standard Oil acquired the property, but there does not seem to be any doubt that they held it from at least 1936 or 1937 when Highway 79 was constructed. They sold the property to Pappenfort in 1957 who still holds title. Standard Oil used the property as a “bulk plant” and there is located on the tract a warehouse or pump house. Just to the south of the warehouse is located the triangular tract which plaintiff claims to be part of the public road and which defendant has caused to be fenced in. This triangular tract is located at the northeast comer of the intersection of Highway 79 and what is referred to as the public road.2 According to plaintiff the fence defendant built cuts across the public road forty feet along the east edge of Highway 79 and extends from its southernmost point forty-five feet six inches eastwardly along and within the north edge of the public road. The hypotenuse of that triangle formed by this fence is, according to plaintiff, seventy-one feet six inches long.3

The roadway as originally platted was fifty-four feet wide. At the present time the fence erected by defendant along the northern edge of the roadway, according to Joseph Tadlock, who made surveys for both plaintiff and defendant, is a little over fifty-four feet, “almost fifty-five feet” from the south right of way line of the roadway. This would place the east-west fence north of the original right of way and on defendant’s property. Plaintiff testified that he owned property east of the railroad crossing since 1935 and that he had used the roadway to reach his property even before Highway 79 was constructed. Prior to 1965 when defendant commenced to fence in the triangular tract he would use the roadway and tract on an [222]*222average of eight to ten times a week. The surface of the tract was gravel and at one time was blacktop. He observed other people using the tract. In the Spring of 1962 plaintiff had one Bernard McMenamy bring fill into his property and it would be brought in from the north on Highway 79 and the trucks would turn east on the roadway crossing the triangular tract in making their turn. According to plaintiff this tract was blacktop prior to McMena-my’s trucks using it. The trucks tore it up pretty badly and the City of Clarksville had McMenamy repair the roadway and the tract. Richard W. Middleton testified that he was at one time the Standard Oil distributor in Clarksville from about 1925 to 1942. He testified that after Highway 79 was constructed in 1936 or 1937 the triangular tract was used by him and others as a “cut off” from Highway 79 over to the crossing there. Mackey Burns who owned a farm east of the railroad tracks testified he used the roadway as early as 1940. Prior to the fence being built the three-cornered tract was used “as an access to that turn-off for the bottom road”. He had used it eight or ten times a week and saw other people using it.

Waivie Busch testified that she was a self-employed farmer, and has been using the roadway to reach her farm in the bottom land since 1934 about eight or ten times a week. The triangular tract was used by her for a roadway.

Joe Estes, an employee of plaintiff, had been using the roadway and tract for fifteen years prior to the trial. He said the surface was gravel and that other people used it prior to defendant erecting the fence.

John Estes testified that he drove a truck for Ayers Oil Company and has used the roadway everyday for twenty-three years. The triangular strip was used for a public thoroughfare. Other people used it, cars, trucks, farm equipment. It was an all weather surface. He saw maintenance men of the Eight Mile Road District and Bernard McMenamy’s men “maintaining it at one time”. The time McMenamy’s men were working there was in 1962 when they were hauling dirt down to the fill. They put dirt on it.

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Bluebook (online)
439 S.W.2d 219, 1969 Mo. App. LEXIS 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mackey-v-weakley-moctapp-1969.