Miller v. Southard

162 N.W. 146, 38 S.D. 477, 1917 S.D. LEXIS 48
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1917
DocketFile No. 3752
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 162 N.W. 146 (Miller v. Southard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Southard, 162 N.W. 146, 38 S.D. 477, 1917 S.D. LEXIS 48 (S.D. 1917).

Opinions

McCOY, J.

This suit was instituted to forever restrain and :njoin defendants from; in any manner interfering with or obstructing the free use and enjoyment by plaintiff of a certain alleged private alley, or right of way easement, 10 feet wide and 132)4 feet long, extending' westward from the north end of a certain parcel or lot of land owned by-plaintiff in 'block 13, city of Canton, to the street on the west side of said block. Findings and judgment were in favor of .plaintiff, and defendants appeal.

The defendants duly excepted to all the findings in favor of plaintiff. Among others, the court made the finding that defend[481]*481ant Kennedy bay, without any right, consent, or authority, excavated. the -ground in said right of way or easement, thereby rendering the same impassable, an-d has also, during the pendency of this suit, above said excavation and upon wall's, constructed thereon a building intended- for and- used- as an opera -house, which permanently -obstructs and renders useless such right of way or easement. The judgment requires sai-d defendant to remove said opera 'house from said right of way, or that he build an archway under said building sufficient to permit of free and unobstructed- passage of vehicles through- and u-pon said right of way. The defendants proposed the following finding, which was by the trial court refused-:

“That on or about the ist day of February, A. D. 1883, the plaintiffs predecessor in interest, William H. Miller, Sr., made an agreement with Emily Southard and G. A. Nelson by which he abandoned the alley in question and described in his deed set out in his complaint in consideration of 'being given a right of way out north to Fourth street and west to Cedar street, 22 feet further north.”

The defendants, appellants, now assign as error the -making of said finding in favor of plaintiff and the refusal of said finding proposed by defendants. It is contended by appellants that the undisputed evidence conclusively shows an abandonment of the right ■ of way in question by William H. Miller, Sr., the iormer plaintiff in- this action and former owner of said right o-f way. This is the vital question upon the merits of this appeal.

This action was originally commenced by William FI. Miller, Sr., who died pending suit; the present plaintiff, William H. Miller, Jr., a son, successor in interest of the right o-f way in question, -by devise, subsequently became a party by substitution. The present plaintiff has no greater right in the premises than had his -predecessor in interest, the original plaintiff. There is no material conflict in the testimony upon the proposition o-f the •abandonment of said right of way by said Miller, Sr. The following plat of said block 13 shows the location o-f plaintiffs- lot and the lots of defendants, an-d the right of way in question, and [482]*482the location of the other rights of way material to the controversy -at the time of the alleged abandonment of the alleyway in question: ■

On August 26, 1880, Mrs. Southard, by deed, conveyed to William. H. Miller, Sr., the said lot now owned by respondent, and the io-foot wide right of way in question. Subsequently, in the years 1882 and 1883, the matter of establishing other alleyways, in place of the alleyway in question, so deeded to Miller, was under consideration by the owners of lots in said block 13. .At the time of the consideration of the change of alleyways, the Southard's, Miller, Nelson, Mrs. Holsey, and her father, Benedict, were lot owners in said block. The proposition was raised that the alleyway deeded to Miller was too narrow for practical use. One Holsey, being called as a witness, testified that he had lived in Canton 47 years; that he attended to the business of his wife and Benedict in the matter of the laying out of the two new alleyways in 1882 and 1883; that Miller had bought a lot from Southards, and Southards were trying to sell to Nelson, and the question was raised that the alleywaj' in dispute was too narrow, that they met in Southard’s office, and it was agreed that a' t6-fo.ot wide alleyway out to the street north from the Miller lot would be a better outlet, and Miller said he would accept that [483]*483permanently in place of the other; that- Nelson also wanted a way out west. In pursuance of this oral agreement, the lot owners on either side of this proposed 16-foot wide alleyway, running north and south, made deeds for alleyway uses and purposes; those on the west side of the alley conveying 8 feet wide on the east end of their lots, and those on the east side of the alley conveying 8 feet wide on the west end of their lots. These deeds conveyed lands on both sides of the center of the 16-foot wide alleyway from the street north of said block as far south as the north line of the Nelson lot designated on the foregoing plat. These said deeds, it will be observed lacked io feet of extending the i6-foot wide alleyway to .the north end of the Miller 'lot. Nelson and the Southards were then the owners of the 8xio feet parcels of land lying between the north end of the Miller lot and the south end of the 16-foot wide alleyway as created by said deeds'.

The -witness Hofeey further testified that, after the making of said deeds, it was arranged that Nelson and Southard should complete the end of the extension of the i6-foot wide alleyway until it came to the Miller lot. In 1882, a deed,was also executed by the lot owner as grantor to. other lot owners in said block as grantees for alley purpose, 12 feet wide running east and west on the north side of lot 7 from the 16-foot wide alley to the street on the west side of said block. It further appears from the evidence that after the agreement to- substitute the 16-foot wide, north and south-, alleyway in place of the alleyway in question, the Southards fenced up and closed the io-foot wide alleyway in dispute by erecting fences and building across the same, and planted trees thereon; that such, fences and structures remained thereon until destroyed by fire in 1888; and that, much of the time since 1888 to the time -of the commencement of this action, the said right of way in dispute -has ’been obstructed by fences and other obstructions, and that at no time since 1883, until the cómmencement of this action, had Miller, Sr., ever used said right of way or objected to- the obstruction thereof by the Southards or any other person. It also further -appears that the new alleyways created in 1882 and 1883 have ever since their creation been used as alleyways by the public, and by the occupants of that block, including Miller, :Sr., and by all others who desired to use the same.

[484]*484[1-4] The foregoing facts are not substantially disputed. We are of the opinion that these facts conclusively show that Miller, Sr., under an express agreement so to do, intentionally abandoned the io-foot wide alleyway in question, and accepted in lieu thereof, as a consideration for 'such abandonment, the use of the 16-foot wide alleyway created in 1883. The easement here involved was one created by express grant. It was, however, an easement only. Plaintiff, or his predecessor, at no time had title to the soil over which this easement attached. ' Plaintiff’s1 only interest under his grant was a right of way. It seems to be universally held that a party entitled to a right of way easement in the land of another may abandon and relinquish such right by acts in .pais, and without deed or other instrument in writing. To show this there must be acts of the owner showing an intent, either express or implied, to abandon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 N.W. 146, 38 S.D. 477, 1917 S.D. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-southard-sd-1917.