People v. Foss

8 L.R.A. 472, 45 N.W. 480, 80 Mich. 559, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 678
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 8 L.R.A. 472 (People v. Foss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Foss, 8 L.R.A. 472, 45 N.W. 480, 80 Mich. 559, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 678 (Mich. 1890).

Opinion

Morse, J.

Defendant was convicted of assault and battery upon one August Stieman in justice’s court. Upon appeal to the circuit court for the county of St. [560]*560Clair, lie was again convicted by the verdict of a juryl He brings his case to this Court upon exceptions before judgment.

The place of the alleged assault was in a public highway, and, as the defendant claims, upon that portion of the same within the half adjoining his father’s lands. The farm of the complainant lies opposite his father’s, and on the other side of this highway. There is a ditch running close to the fence on defendant’s father’s side of the road. Between this ditch and the usually traveled track of the highway there was a strip of grass land, from a rod to a rod and a half in width, extending the whole length of the father’s premises. Grass had grown there many years, and, when in condition, had been cut, sometimes by defendant and his father, and occasionally by Stieman. There had been more or less controversy about this grass, which finally culminated in the affray causing this suit.

The defendant lived with his father. On June 15, 1889, Stieman was drawing rails from his fence, on the south side of the road, to his orchard, using the highway for that purpose. He was drawing the rails upon a crotch between three and four feet wide. Stieman, after loading, drove on the north side of the center of the road, outside of the beaten or traveled track, and upon the grass. Befendant was mowing. Stieman claims that he told defendant to get out of the way. The elder Foss was there with a bushel basket and rake, gathering the cut grass into the basket. They acted as if they did not hear Stieman, and he—

Told his horses to get up, and the boy then went on the north side of the road, and the old man stood on the south side of the road; * * * and as I went by the boy cut my horse on the back side with the scythe with which he had been mowing.”

[561]*561They had some hard words, and Stieman testifies that, as he was driving on, the defendant came up behind him, and struck him twice on the neck. Stieman was corroborated in his testimony by his son. Defendant testified that Stieman came across the road and drove his team upon him; that he threw his scythe into the fence corner, and shoved the horses back with his hands. Stieman dropped his lines “and hauled off,” and said:

“‘I will kill you/ When I see he was going to hit me, I pushed him back. I gave him two pushes,- — -one after the other; and, when he see I was pushing him, ha went straight across the road and got a scythe, and came up to me, and hauled off three times, and says: 'I cut you in two/ "

Defendant stepped back out of his way, and finally Stieman went away, with threats of future hurt to defendant. Defendant was supported in his testimony by the evidence of his father. The record also states that other witnesses were produced by the prosecution who gave testimony in corroboration of the facts testified to by Stieman and his son; and the defendant produced other witnesses who gave evidence in corroboration of the facts sworn to by himself and his father.

The excuse of Stieman for driving on the grass was that the road was muddy. He admitted that there was grass on his own side, but claimed that it was not wide enough to drive on. The testimony on the part of the defendant* showed that the road was sandy, and, although it had rained two days before, the road was not muddy. The beaten track was somewhat nearer Stieman's fence than it was that of Foss; but it is clear that Stieman drove over on the grass for the express purpose of damaging it, as there was room between the beaten track and the uncut grass to drive upon the sward where the grass had been cut. It is also evident from the record that there [562]*562was bad blood between the parties, growing out of their rights in the highway as claimed by each. It was claimed by Stieman that Foss had pastured his cattle in the road, and that he had forbid it, because they trespassed upon his side of the highway, but that he did not quarrel with Foss about the grass on Foss’ side of the road. He admitted, however, that he cut it one year, and pastured it another. Foss and his son testified that Stieman told them that, if they would let him have one swath on their side of the road, he would make them no trouble, and that, when he drove upon the grass, he also purposely stamped it down with his feet.

The defendant’s counsel requested that the following instruction be given to the jury, which was refused:

“That the defendant had a legal right to cut the grass on his side of the highway; that the grass there growing belonged to him, — as much so as the grass growing on any other part of his farm, — and, for the purpose of harvesting the grass so growing on his side of the highway, he had a right to be there, in person, for that purpose, either of his own right or as the servant of his father, who appears to be the owner of the land, so long as he did not interfere with the free and ordinary use of the highway for public travel.”

And also that defendant had a right to protect the grass, and, in so protecting it from being run over and destroyed by Stieman/ he would be justified in using as much force as would be necessary to keep Stieman from destroying it; and, if the jury found that' no more force was used than was necessary to protect it, their verdict should be for the defendant. The court was also asked to charge, in substance, that Stieman was a trespasser on that side of the highway, and liable to be put oil by the defendant, if no more force was used than was necessary to protect the grass, unless the jury found that it was necessary for Stieman to drive there in order to have the free and customary use of the highway for public travel.

[563]*563The circuit judge refused to so charge, and instructed the jury that, as to the question of the right of Stieman to travel where he did in the highway, as a matter of law, a person had a right to travel where he pleased upon any part of the wrought portion of the highway; •that it was usual to dig ditches on each side, and throw the earth taken from that, and construct a road-bed, and that the travel is usually between these ditches; and that .any person, in traveling along the highway about his business, has the right, absolutely, to go where he pleases, so long as he does not interfere with other persons traveling on the highway.

“I think the public, or any one of the public, has the right to go wherever their judgment might dictate, or their caprice may lead them to go; that, because it happens that the beaten track is in a certain locality, it need not always remain just there, and we know, as a -matter of fact, it changes according to the caprice of the public or circumstances, of which I might enumerate many, and one person has a right to commence to •change that track as well as another. There may be reasons why a person may desire to go upon grass ground instead pf the beaten track; and, whatever the reason may be, I instruct yon, as a matter of law, that a person has a right to go where he chooses along that wrought portion of the road. And, if it is a fact that the defendant in this case made an assault upon Mr. Stieman because he persisted in exercising that right, and in driving upon the grass, and struck him, then he is guilty of assault and battery as charged in the complaint.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 L.R.A. 472, 45 N.W. 480, 80 Mich. 559, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-foss-mich-1890.