Moulton v. de Guibert

144 N.E. 310, 312 Ill. 567
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1924
DocketNo. 15708
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 144 N.E. 310 (Moulton v. de Guibert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moulton v. de Guibert, 144 N.E. 310, 312 Ill. 567 (Ill. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellants filed a bill for injunction in the circuit court of Woodford county seeking to restrain appellee from closing or interfering with their and the public use of a certain roadway alleged to have been established for about fifty years and to have been used during that time as a public road. The matter was referred to a master in chancery. His findings were in favor of appellee. The objections to the master’s report were overruled and the trial court found the equities were with appellee. The decree directed that the injunction be dissolved and the bill dismissed for want of equity at appellants’ costs. Appellee filed suggestions of damages caused by the wrongful issuing of the injunction, and the cause for that purpose was continued for hearing. The case has been brought to this court by appeal.

Appellants, or some of them, and appellee, owned adjoining farms in Woodford county. A public highway runs through appellee’s farm in a somewhat easterly and westerly direction. From the farm of appellants (sometimes called the Beavers farm) to the south of appellee’s land, and for a short distance over the southern portion of his farm, runs a roadway connecting with the above mentioned road. The only issue in the case is whether this roadway is a public road, or whether it is a private road and the part of it running through appellee’s land is only permissively used. No plat appears in the record, but a sufficiently accurate description may be given to determine the issue in the case. A number of deeds were introduced in evidence. Appellants traced ownership back to 1852. Appellee’s grandfather and father had previously owned a part of the tract on which he lives, and the father subsequently purchased another portion of the present farm, consisting of 167 acres. There was no reference in any conveyance to a reservation or grant of a right of way, and it is not claimed there was ever a dedication of this passageway as a public road. In the earlier years of the ownership of these two tracts of land much of it was open prairie and timber land. There were no fences between appellants’ land and appellee’s farm previous to about 1900. In that year appellee became a tenant of his father and afterward received a deed to the land. Owing, perhaps, to the contour of the land, it being near the Illinois river, the roads in the neighborhood of appellants’ and appellee’s farms do not follow section and half-section lines. One road, called the Bottom road, runs northeasterly and southwesterly. It is some distance west and north of appellants’ land but runs through appellee’s land in a northerly direction, and appellee’s house is west of that road. A road called the Metamora road runs from this Bottom road in an easterly and somewhat southerly direction toward Cazenovia and Metamora, in the immediate vicinity of these two farms. Connecting with the Metamora road, the road in question starts from near the barn and house on the Beavers land and runs west for a few rods (different witnesses testifying to different distances) but perhaps not over eight rods, then turns north and runs sixty or eighty rods between appellants’ land and the adjoining farm west, and then turns for a short distance to the northeast down a hill and runs between two hills on appellee’s land, connecting with the Metamora road, as above stated, about twenty-five rods above the appellee’s southern boundary. About 31 or 32 acres of this portion of appellee’s land was a pasture, which he fenced about 1904. There was a traveled track or roadway running in the present location for many years, and apparently at one time there was some travel on this road to the south over other farms to another easterly and westerly road, but the farms to the south have been enclosed by fences and the roadway has been discontinued, so that at the time of the hearing the road in question served only the two or three farms near appellee’s farm. It appears, also, that in earlier years there had been at least two other roads running across a part of the Beavers farm which are not now used, — at least not to any extent. The Beavers farm touched the east and west (or Metamora) road only for a few rods some distance east of the roadway in question. There is a creek, called Coon creek, running in a northerly direction through appellants’ and appellee’s lands, which is between the house on appellants’ land and the point at which their land touches the Metamora road.'

Most of the witnesses who testified in this case knew of the fences and gates on the pasture land of appellee and on the land of appellants and when they were erected, and that never had any question arisen, until recently, as to their being properly erected, but there is a dispute as to how the fenced portion, and especially the gates, came to be erected and what the character of the roadway is. Appellee testified that when he fenced the pasture land at the south párt of his farm, a previous owner of the Beavers farm, J. H. Schneider, asked him for the privilege of crossing the! land where the roadway now is, and in pursuance of that arrangement Schneider put up two board gates about fourteen feet in width, one on the south fence and one on the north fence of the pasture. No contract was signed, though it appears from the testimony that a contract had been prepared at the time of the arrangement but never executed, because the plan went into effect immediately and the relations of appellee and Schneider were so agreeable it was not deemed necessary to have a written agreement, and during all the time Schneider owned the place he used the road and kept the gates closed in pursuance of the understanding. A letter was introduced from Schneider, who lives in Oklahoma, to the effect that he had no agreement with appellee about fencing, but that appellee came to him after he (Schneider) had fenced his farm and said he intended to fence his, and did so, and they each put in their own gates. The testimony of a brother-in-law appears to corroborate appellee that appellee’s fence was put in before or at the same time,’and that Schneider put up a gate so he could go across the pasture to the public road, and that he always kept the gates closed. Appellee further testified that when Schneider sold the place to Ege Beavers, the deceased husband of appellant Elizabeth Moulton, he gave Beavers permission to cross the pasture land if he would keep the gates closed, and that Beavers always did keep them closed, frequently closing them when third parties left them open. The preponderance of the evidence appears to show that the gates were kept closed after the fences were put in and up to the time of the ownership of appellants. The appellee testified that after Beavers’ death the latter’s widow came to him and desired to make a new arrangement about the gates and one of the fences so as to avoid stopping her car on a steep grade in order to open one of the gates, and that she gave him the use of four or five acres additional pasture ground, and the fence was changed. The gates, according to appellee’s testimony, were not kept closed in 1922, and he then built a fence across the roadway where the gates had been, after he had given appellants notice. Someone tore down the fence and the same was re-built, and later the injunction was served by appellants upon appellee.

It is suggested in the brief of appellants that there was at one time a fence along the west side of the road as it ran through appellee’s pasture, and that some of the old posts remain.

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Bluebook (online)
144 N.E. 310, 312 Ill. 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moulton-v-de-guibert-ill-1924.