McCauley v. Tucker

134 S.E.2d 296, 204 Va. 827, 1964 Va. LEXIS 126
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 20, 1964
DocketRecord No. 5672
StatusPublished

This text of 134 S.E.2d 296 (McCauley v. Tucker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCauley v. Tucker, 134 S.E.2d 296, 204 Va. 827, 1964 Va. LEXIS 126 (Va. 1964).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Donald F. Tucker and Marjory H. Tucker, his wife, complainants, filed their bill in chancery claiming a right by prescription to a roadway “of the width of about twenty-five feet” beginning on their land, conveyed to them by Leonard C. Miller and wife in May 1961, and continuing through the adjoining land of the defendants, Pat M. McCauley and wife, to State Route No. 652, known as the Truslow Road. They alleged that they and their predecessors in title had made constant, continuous, adverse, hostile, notorious, and exclusive use of the road for more than twenty years. They further alleged that [828]*828the defendants had destroyed a bridge over which the roadway passed on their property, making the road impassable. They prayed that an injunction be granted restraining the defendants from obstructing their use of the road.

Defendants filed an answer denying the allegations of the bill and alleging that the road now claimed by complainants was opened in 1956, and that prior to that time neither the complainants nor their predecessors had ever used it. Defendants also alleged that complainants’ predecessors in title used outlets other than that across defendants’ land, and that any use of the road in question was with the express permission of the defendants.

Upon consideration of the pleadings and the evidence, all of which was by depositions, the court below entered the decree appealed from adjudicating that the complainants had acquired by prescription a right of way, not otherwise described, across the land of the defendants and enjoining the defendants from interfering with the use thereof by the complainants and their successors.

It appears from the record that by deed of May 25, 1956, Bascom S. Pribble, Jr., special commissioner, conveyed to the defendants a tract of 82.6 acres formerly belonging to Aubrey R. Abel. Along the south edge of this tract is State Route 652. On the north side of this tract is a 24-acre tract owned by the complainants and conveyed to them by Leonard C. Miller and wife by deed of May 6, 1961. The Millers own a 37-acre tract adjoining the complainants’ land on the north.

The depositions given by the complainants’ witnesses were in material part as follows:

Allen H. Withers testified that he was born in 1883 on the property now owned by the Millers and lived there about twenty years. His knowledge of the neighborhood was in a period prior to 1924. He was asked what outlet was used to the public road when he lived on the Miller property and he answered, “We used the outlet we come out here through Bettis, but he sold it to somebody, we come out by the hill at Bettis, to the highway.” He was asked whether he was familiar with the road as it now exists across the McCauley land, as to “how it goes or where it goes,” and he said, “That was the only outlet we had. We had some neighbors who let us come through the place when it was dry, we had a bad road and we couldn’t get out * * only outlet there was, it has been there over eighty years.” Asked how long the use continued that he referred to, he responded that he did not know because he had moved away [829]*829from there in 1924; but he said, “The people used it back there always.” Asked as to who else “used those roads in there,” he replied, “I don’t know, just people come back and forth through there, I don’t know who used it.”

John W. Withers testified that he was born in 1885 on the property now owned by the Millers, and lived for several years in the house where the Tuckers now live. Asked how, from his earlier recollection, he and his family traveled from this property to the public highway, he answered, “The same road that goes there now only one outlet there. We had a couple of outlets but we didn’t use them seldom.” One of these, he said, was through Porter Snellings, and another was through John Wallace’s place. He said they did not go that way often; that if Mr. Snellings wouldn’t let them go across his property, “we used the old highway that comes by Mr. Tucker’s home, that is the road we used all together.” That road, he said, passed around the edge of the McCauley land.

Keith Wine, 76 years old, a former resident on and owner of the Miller property, testified that he had lived in the neighborhood all of his life and that “in dry weather we could use the road across Mrs. Howdershelt’s or Mr. Wallace’s, any other time, we had to use the road we are talking about.”

James Snellings, 55, testified that he, since childhood, had been familiar with the property owned by complainants and with the road that was used for getting in and out of the property. He was asked, “What road was used to get from that road [State Route 652] back and forth to the property where Mr. Tucker now lives?” He answered, “Just below Wallace’s place you turn right by Mr. Keith Wine he and Mr. Self live on that road leads right on over there.” He said that McCauley “owns the property that crosses it now.” That, he said, “is the only one that has been used except for special occasions.”

Neither of the complainants testified that the road over the Mc-Cauley land had been used by them in any fashion.

The witnesses for the defendants testified in substance as follows:

Defendant McCauley introduced as Defendants’ Exhibit 3 a sketch of defendants’ property, showing a road entering it across its northern boundary near its northwest corner, running southwardly about halfway through defendants’ land and near its western boundary lines, and then turning west and crossing defendants’ western boundary line, as further described below. This road was sketched in black pencil and described by McCauley as “the right-of-way prior to [830]*8301956 * * from the Tucker property * * to 652,” the Truslow Road. After leaving the defendant’s property the evidence indicates that it goes through the land of Hansford Abel to the Truslow Road “over on that side.”

From the point where this road turned west, McCauley traced in red pencil a road continuing southwardly through the west side of defendants’ land to the southern boundary thereof into State Route 652. This road, said McCauley, was built by Dennis Courtney in 1956. It is part of what complainants appear to claim as their right of way. McCauley testified that he gave Leonard Miller, one of the Tuckers’ grantors, permission to use this section in 1958 before the Millers made their deed to the Tuckers. Tucker, he said, never asked for such permission but claimed it was his right of way.

Dennis Courtney testified that he lived on the Tucker property from June 1956 to June 1957 when it was owned by Hansford Abel; that he built the road indicated in red on Defendants’ Exhibit 3 in 1956, and “there were trees and everything in it when I cleared it.” He said that there was then a road to the Tucker place through the Wallace place [on the west], but he could not get in that way and for that reason he opened a road on the south end of the McCauley property, and there was no road there until he built it.

Leonard C. Miller and his wife, Jewel Miller, who conveyed the Tucker tract to the Tuckers by deed of May 1961, own the property just north of the Tucker land, and they have lived there in sight of the Tucker home since 1951. They testified that from the time they moved there until 1956 or 1957, they traveled to the Truslow Road [No.

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Bluebook (online)
134 S.E.2d 296, 204 Va. 827, 1964 Va. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccauley-v-tucker-va-1964.