Owens v. Goff

148 S.W.2d 714, 285 Ky. 552, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 429
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 28, 1941
StatusPublished

This text of 148 S.W.2d 714 (Owens v. Goff) 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
Owens v. Goff, 148 S.W.2d 714, 285 Ky. 552, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 429 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

The appellees and plaintiffs below, Warren Goff, et al., own a farm in Pulaski county, the south line or side of which is bordered by the .Cumberland river. Immediately west of their tract is one owned by appellant and defendant below, Lena Owens, and it also extends south to the same river. The line separating the' two farms for a considerable distance north from the river is only about 115 feet east of a public road known as .Jacksboro Road, all of which is on the land of defendant. This controversy involves the right to a pass-way easement claimed by plaintiffs across the narrow strip of land lying between the public road on defendant’s land, and plaintiffs’ west line at a point only one hundred and thirteen feet wide, which the proof in the case shows, has been used by owners and occupiers of plaintiffs’ tract a great number of years as a passway to and from plaintiffs’ farm over the narrow strip referred to — some of the witnesses testifying that it had been so used, not only by plaintiffs and their predecessors in title, but also to some extent by others living beyond their farm. A short while before September 2,, 1939 — when this action was filed in the Pulaski circuit ■court by plaintiffs against defendant — she placed obstructions in the passway, a part of which consisted in building a cabin across it. By this action plaintiffs sought mandatory process requiring defendant to re *554 move the obstructions, and a prohibitory order preventing her from placing future obstructions therein, on the ground that they were the owners of an easement over defendant’s land occupied by the passway which had been acquired by long continued adverse user which had ripened into an acquired prescriptive right. The answer was a denial of plaintiffs’ ownership of the easement as claimed by them, and an issue out of chancery was ordered. Testimony was heard and the factual issues were submitted to a jury under instructions prepared and offered by counsel for defendant — each of which the court gave. The verdict was in favor of plaintiffs, followed by a judgment in accordance with the prayer of the petition, to reverse which defendant prosecutes this appeal.

Perhaps there is no principle of law wherein the line of demarcation between rights acquired under it and where they were denied than the one of acquiring-private easements over land by prescriptive use. Some general principles are well settled among which are, that a continuous and uninterrupted user of the passway for as much as or more than fifteen years will raise a presumption that it was being claimed adversely and as a matter of right, but which presumption is a rebuttal one which the owner of the servient estate may overcome with his testimony and when he establishes by his proof that the use began under permission from him, then another presumption arises that the continuous use thereafter was amicable to the title of the servient owner under his originally granted permission. But in such case_ the presumption so indulged in favor of the servient owner may be overcome by the dominant claimant of the passway with testimony showing requisite adverse user thereafter. But from that stage of the investigation many and varied facts and circumstances are permitted to be considered in arriving at the intent of the parties upon which the character of use depends and should be determined.

In the case of Snyder v. Carroll, 203 Ky. 320, 262 S. W. 290, a more or less discussion of the history of the principle of law here involved, i. e., the acquisition of a passway easement by prescriptive use over another’s land, and the various facts which should be taken into consideration, were therein discussed. It was pointed out in that opinion that the doctrine arose when it first *555 began to be recognized and enforced from tbe necessities of the case. At that time there were bnt few public roads. The country was mostly in primeval forest and settlers were compelled to have rights of ingress and egress to their scattered settlements. As the country advanced and improved roads became more plentiful the necessity for such passways gradually diminished. It was also pointed out in that opinion that if the use of the passway began with the permission of the servient estate owner, or even if he did not expressly_ object to such user but suffered and permitted it to continue without objection, the evidence should nevertheless show in some manner that the owner of the dominant estate was so appropriating that of the servient estate owner under a claim of right. Therefore, in order for the court to be enabled to arrive at some tangible conclusion upon the contested issues, a presumption was created that the user by the dominant estate owner would be considered as adverse when he had so used it for as much as or more than fifteen years, and in overcoming that presumption the servient estate owner might — in addition to his testimony contradicting that presumption — prove other pertinent facts which had a tendency to disprove it. ■ Our comments made in that opinion will not be repeated here since they may be ascertained by consulting it. Some prior cases supporting what was therein said are cited therein, and the opinion has been followed and adhered to since its rendition in a number of cases.

Coming now to the testimony in this case on the issue of prescriptive use, many disinterested witnesses- — excluding plaintiffs — several of whom are advanced in age and have lived in that neighborhood all their lives, testified to the long continued user of the passway by owners and occupiers of the- land now owned by plaintiffs, and sometimes by their neighbors in getting to the Jacksboro Road. Some of them said that the use had so continued for perhaps as long as fifty or sixty years, no witness placing the beginning of the use nearer to the time of trial than thirty or thirty-five years. The proof also shows that plaintiffs do not now have, nor have they ever had, any passway by which they could reach the Jacksboro or other road than by crossing the strip between it and plaintiffs’ west, line separating their farm from that of defendant. It is true that some proof was injected in the case that many years ago there was *556 a very inadequate and most difficult passway to travel (because of the topography of the territory) that was-used mostly as a pedestrian route, and sometimes by wagons with ox teams, but it is shown that the terrain over which the location of that passway ran (but for how long and to what extent is not shown) is so rough and difficult to travel over that it is practically impossible to do so, and especially with modern vehicles of travel. That old passway has long since been abandoned and the place where it ran is now scarcely discernible. It was about fifty poles south of the present' disputed one, and its route was greatly obstructed because of the knobs and bluffs across which it ran near' the Cumberland River. Upon its entire disuse the ancestors of plaintiffs began the use of the present pass-way some fifty rods north of the old abandoned one, and they and their successors in title have continued to use it from that time. During the period of user they repaired the passway so as to keep it in reasonable condition for travel and, at least at one time, they blew rocks, out of it with the use of dynamite.

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Related

Marrs v. Ratliff
128 S.W.2d 604 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1939)
Snyder v. Carroll
262 S.W. 290 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1924)
Himler Coal Co. v. Kirk
266 S.W. 355 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.2d 714, 285 Ky. 552, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-goff-kyctapphigh-1941.