Mudge v. Wagoner

151 N.E. 276, 320 Ill. 357
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1926
DocketNo. 17005. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 151 N.E. 276 (Mudge v. Wagoner) 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
Mudge v. Wagoner, 151 N.E. 276, 320 Ill. 357 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant filed his bill in the circuit court of Madison county seeking to enjoin appellee from interfering with the use of a certain road passing over the land of appellee, on the ground that the road had become a public highway by user. The prayer of the bill is that defendant be enjoined from interfering with the use of the road by complainant or his tenants, or agents, or with the reasonable grading, dragging and repairing of the road and placing reasonable drains thereon; also that defendant be restrained from placing or maintaining any posts, gates, fence or other obstruction upon the road or plowing up the same. The bill alleges that the road extends over a strip 16 feet in width along the westerly line or side of the west half of the southeast quarter of section 10, township 4, north, range 5, west, in Madison county; that the road extends from the southern side of the premises of complainant south to the east and west public highway along the southern border of section 10; that this road continues north along the west side of the premises of complainant to the north side of section 10 and thence east along the northern boundary of that section. On hearing before the court the chancellor found the issues for defendant and dismissed the bill. The cause is brought here for review.

The principal assignment of error is that the finding of the chancellor was against the manifest weight of the evidence. Errors are also assigned on the rulings on the evidence.

It appears that appellant is the owner of the west half of the northeast quarter of- section 10 and 25 acres off the north end of the west half of the southeast quarter of said section, making a tract of 105 acres lying on the east side of the center line, north and south, through the section. Appellee owns the southwest quarter of section 10 and the south 55 acres of the west half of the southeast quarter of the section. The road in question extends north and south through the center of section 10. Appellant’s residence is on this road at the southwest corner of his 80-acre tract. The residence of appellee is on the road at the southeast corner of the southwest quarter of the section.

On the hearing before the court appellant offered the testimony of various witnesses. Andrew Clementz testified that he was sixty-six years old and had known the land for fifty years; that he lived on the land now owned by appellant from the year 1887 to 1893; that when he was seven years old he lived on the 160 acres now owned by appellee; that there was then a road running north and south in the place between the 55-acre tract and 160-acre tract of appellee where the road exists now; that he remembered this road from the time he was fifteen or sixteen years of age; that anyone who wanted to go through there did so; that there was no restriction; that general hauling went on up and down that road by anyone who had hauling to do in that direction; that no one ever objected to the use of it and no one asked permission; that he could not tell whether the road followed exactly the same ruts because he did not pay attention, but that it was in practically the same place; that he thought it ran on the west side of the center line of the section; that he had been on the road within the last two years; that the portion of the road extending on north over appellant’s farm had been changed slightly.

E. W. Mudge, father of appellant, testified that he was eighty years old; that he had known this road since 1871; that the road was there then and has always been used since that time; that the road has always been on the east side of the north and south line between the 160acre tract and the 55-acre tract. He was asked by counsel for appellee if he knew of the road extending in a southwesterly direction through an orchard and between the house and barn on appellee’s farm, and he stated that he did not; that it had not been there since 1871; that the road did not vary more than sixteen feet any time since he remembered it.

Herman Wright testified that he had known the road for forty-five years; that in 1886 he moved onto land northwest of that owned by the father of appellant; that when he had occasion to go south across these lands he used this road; that he did not know how long the road had been open.

Joseph Wiegand testified that he had known the road about thirty-three years; that he lived on appellant’s land when it was owned by Harry Hall; that witness used this road from 1893 to 1905; that as he remembered it, it was partly on the 160 acres and partly on the 55 acres; that the road is now in the same place as when he lived there and that it was always at the same place during that time; that everyone who wanted to use it did so; that he had seen strangers use the road; that no one had ever suggested to him that Hall or anyone else had any agreement about the road.

John Schouster testified that he was fifty-nine years old and that he had known this road for forty years; that he lived on the place now owned by appellant in the year 1910 and used this road while there; that the road was then the same as it is now.

Otto Trost testified that he had known the road for twenty-seven years; that he knew it in 1901, when he and his parents moved on the Hirsche farm, near by; that anybody used the road that wanted to; that during all the time he had known it, it was in the same place.

William Potthast testified that he is a tenant on appellant’s land; that he had lived there for twelve years and had known the road since then; that there had been no change since that time; that he had used the road without interference until two years before the hearing, when appellee built an obstruction across it; that he had repaired the road in different places by putting brush into the mud-holes so that he could get through.

It appears from the record that a branch or stream runs from the west side of the section in a southeasterly direction across the lower end of appellant’s farm and the northeasterly corner of the 55-acre tract of appellee, and that a bridge was built across the stream in this roadway at the south end of the land now owned by appellant and has been maintained there for most of the time during the use of this road. The evidence does not show just when the. bridge was built or who built it.

Appellee testified that this road was in use when he bought his farm, in 1891; that at that time the road at the south end went through the yard on the west side of his house in a northeasterly direction for some distance and then .followed the line north; that in 1892 he changed the south end of the road because it was more convenient to him to have it on the east side of his house; that ten or twelve years after he went on the farm he had a conversation with Hall, who then owned the 105 acres now owned by appellant, and that he demanded of Hall that he pay rent for the use of the roadway; that Hall was a little stubborn at first and didn’t want to pay anything but at last he did pay; that he paid three dollars for a while and later five dollars. Presumably the witness meant per year. He testified that this rent was to cover back to the year 1891, and that just the year before Hall died he paid appellee the sum of $20, which, as appellee testified, was to pay the rent as far as Hall had the land rented out.

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Bluebook (online)
151 N.E. 276, 320 Ill. 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mudge-v-wagoner-ill-1926.