Marrs v. Ratliff

128 S.W.2d 604, 278 Ky. 164, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 411
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 2, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 128 S.W.2d 604 (Marrs v. Ratliff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marrs v. Ratliff, 128 S.W.2d 604, 278 Ky. 164, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 411 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Reversing.

This appeal presents for our review and determination the question of whether or not an easement of public passway has been acquired by prescription by appellees over an eight acre tract owned by appellant.

This suit was brought by appellant, seeking. to enjoin appellees from trespassing upon this tract of her land, by their use of it as a public passway, and asking an injunction, restraining the defendants (here appellees) from further trespassing upon her land and removing its fences.

Appellant alleged in her petition that such use of the passway, even though extending over a long period of years, was allowed as a neighborly privilege to neighboring land owners or kinspeople of the owner of the tract and not to the public generally. -

The answer to this petition, on the other hand, denied these averments of the petition and affirmatively *166 alleged that the passway in question was one whiehhad been used by the public generally, as a matter of right, for a long period of years (much in excess of the statutory period) and that a prescriptive right of public pass-way over the tract in question had been thereby acquired.

It further appears that shortly prior to the filing of this suit, appellant, feeling that her land was being wrongfully used as a passway by certain parties, especially the appellees, without permission and that they were attempting to convert her private passway over this small tract of her land into a public highway, in that they had removed the gate and cross bar located at the southern and northern ends of the field respectively, had her husband, as her agent, to stop this misuse of her property, close up the passway entrances, by erecting a wire fence across them.

Upon this being done, the appellees, whether by way of retaliation or for the purpose of asserting claim to keep the passway open, swore out a warrant against the appellant’s husband in the magistrate’s court, upon which he was arrested, tried, and found guilty of having, by fencing the openings, obstructed a public way. Thereupon this suit was filed against appellees.

Upon submission of the cause upon the pleadings, joining issue on the question of whether or not this passway was a public way acquired by prescription, and the evidence heard in support of the opposing contentions of the parties on that issue, the lower court overruled appellant’s motion for a temporary injunction and adjudged that “the roadway which is the subject matter _ of this action has been legally established by prescription and is now a roadway.”

Appellant has appealed, seeking a reversal of this adverse judgment.

Prom the record it appears that the small tract of land in question, over which the passway in controversy extends, is located in the triangle .formed by the intersection of the Mayo trail, extending along the lower end of the tract, with the Hackworth Branch, which, in its upward course, from such point of intersection, forms the right boundary line of the tract and,, turning in its course at the upper end of the tract to the left, also a part of its-- upper boundary' line. About midway of the lower line of the tract, abutting'the Mayo trail, *167 there is a gate entering upon a passway leading to the upper end of it, where there is located a cross bar exit, through which the passway leads down a steep bank to the Hackworth Branch, abutting, as stated above, the tract’s upper end.

It is further shown by the record that some forty or fifty years ago a large tract of land, embracing the small tract in question, was owned and occupied by Judge Lindsey Layne, the grandfather of appellant, and that upon his death in 1888, one of his sons, Tandy Layne (the appellant’s father), acquired that certain part of the Judge’s lands which lay below the Mayo trail, then a county road, upon which he lived in his father’s old home, the tract in question and other land lying along and above Hackworth Branch.

It is admitted that Tandy Layne and his children used and occupied all the parcels and different tracts of the land acquired or inherited from his father (which were separated by the Mayo trail and the Hackworth Branch) as one farm, united in its ownership operation, in which there was no relationship of dominant or servient tracts, but that each and all its tracts were alike servient, whether for passway or general use, to the will and control of Tandy Layne, the owner.

The evidence very conclusively shows that Tandy Layne, in the use and management of this farm, made a private passway across this field, now owned by appellant, which afforded him convenient access to the tract in question and to his other lands lying above and beyond Hackworth Branch, and that said passway over it was used by him and the members of his family and his tenants and also some of, his neighbors, living on lands beyond the headwaters of the branch, who were given the privilege of using the passway upon the condition that, in using it for passing through the tract, they would close the gate located at its southern end and replace the cross bars, furnishing a means of exit at its northern end.

Appellant states that her father never refused permission to any of his neighbors to pass through this tract, but always told them to close the gate and replace the cross bars when using the passway.

It is further shown that this passway in question was in no legal sense a way. .of necessity, inasmuch as a public road, .running near to .and parallel with it, lb *168 cated in the bed of the branch, extended along the upper and east side of this property, affording a way out to the Mayo trail, even though it appears that during certain seasons of the year this branch road was difficult to use, due to high waters often at such time flooding it, when Mr. Layne’s neighbors, who lived on lands beyond the headwaters of the branch (some of whom are here appellees), were allowed a permissive use of his private passway here in controversy extending over this tract. ;

Also, it is shown that this passway was used by ■ Tandy Layne in hauling coal and timber from his upper lands and that such privilege to make like use of it was also, upon a few occasions, given to some of his neigh- ¡ bors.

While there is some evidence, given by the appellees and a few of their witnesses, that this passway, during the life of Tandy Layne, was a public passway, it falls far short we conceive of establishing such claim of : .appellees.

The evidence given by the appellant and her brothers and sisters, who testified for her and are entirely disinterested in the outcome of this suit, is to the effect that while Tandy Layne, during his ownership of the farm, allowed his kin and neighbors to make such permissive use of his private passway across the tract in question, its use was exercised only in such way and the right was given without any intention on the part of the owner of the tract, Tandy Layne, to surrender his ; ownership and control of the passway, thus made and used over this field of his farm.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 S.W.2d 604, 278 Ky. 164, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marrs-v-ratliff-kyctapphigh-1939.