Petersen v. Combe

438 P.2d 545, 20 Utah 2d 376, 1968 Utah LEXIS 726
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1968
Docket11009
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 438 P.2d 545 (Petersen v. Combe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petersen v. Combe, 438 P.2d 545, 20 Utah 2d 376, 1968 Utah LEXIS 726 (Utah 1968).

Opinions

HENRIOD, Justice:

Appeal from a judgment declaring a country road a “public highway” by public use for 10 years, under the provisions of Title 27-12-89, Utah Code Annotated 1953. Reversed. No costs awarded.

The complaint in this case is not bottomed on Title 27-12-89 and the judgment, in basing its conclusion thereon, departs from the plaintiff’s theory and prayer for relief.

The complaint simply says that plaintiffs are owners and subdividers of a tract of land immediately east of the Combe land, that the access road running through it “has been dedicated as a public street by Weber County,” has been “established by grants and reservations in the defendants’ property beginning in 1907, and is the only access road for all of the property owners residing in this area”; that plaintiffs are trying to sell lots and “defendants have attempted to stop them, prospective buyers, and the public from using said road by the erection of signs and placing other obs’tructions across said road,” that plaintiffs' have lost customers because of such acts, that plaintiffs have requested Combes to desist and have met with repeated refusals, to the formers’ damage. The prayer is for á restraining order, for damages and for general relief.

There is nothing in the complaint alleging that this country road intentionally was dedicated as a “public thoroughfare” (not “public highway,” as the trial court held it to be). There is nothing therein alleging that the public has used it continuously for 10 years, as the statute requires, and there is but a remote suggestion therein that Weber County dedicated it as such, — • which Weber County cannot do except through condemnation proceedings or conveyance by itself as owner thereof.1 Furthermore it was not alleged that any member or members of the general public used the road, save the property owners in this area.2 Such property owners cannot be considered members of the public generally, as that term generally is used in dedication by user statutes.3 Irrespective of the departure from theory or proof, we think the burden of proving a real public use con[378]*378tinuously for 10 years was not met here in the light of principles to the effect that dedication of rights to the public generally, must be displayed by clear and convincing evidence.4 This we say even in view of the other principle that on review we canvass the facts in a light more favorable to the conclusions of the arbiter of the facts. These principles clash somewhat, but where individual property rights are at stake we must not treat such rights lightly.5

In this case it is true, as this voluminous record reflects, that there was considerable controversion as to some facts to which witnesses testified. However, we think such disagreement went to many facts not germane to a determination of the hard core of this litigation: Was there sufficient evidence by competent testimony, by witnesses who were not self-serving, to show by clear and convincing evidence, that the public generally, — not just a few having their own special and private interests in the road, had used the road continuously for 10 years? We think there was not such quantity or quality of proof adduced. Furthermore, we believe the testimony of plaintiffs’ own witnesses defeated the plaintiffs’ cause on the simple principle that the testimony of one’s own witness is no stronger than its weakest link.

Around the turn of the century, Michael Combe homesteaded the land over which the road, subject of this litigation, was created in a wilderness, sort of an integral part of a forest primeval. By a series of mesne conveyances he divided the tract to his successor kinfolk and others, but there is no question about the fact that the road originally traversed Michael’s land, and any interest therein, by such conveyances, became the property of his transferees, and the latters’ transferees. It must also be conceded that this admitted private road terminated at a dead end at the east end of the Combe domain, where beyond there was nothing but rocks, oakbrush and no attempt to build a road.

The plaintiffs examined the tract east of the dead-end road, and without any apparent effort to check any rights, or to consult with the Combes or anyone else, bought the land and started building homes thereon,— not to live thereon personally but to sell them at an anticipated profit, to 71 prospective purchasers, assuming, apparently, that the road was available for use. At this point the Combes protested this incursion, and took steps to prevent it. The Petersens then filed their complaint, mentioned above, to have this country road declared a public highway by dedication. The Combes claimed in their answer and testimony that they resisted any efforts on the part of unauthorized persons to use what erstwhile was conceded to have been a private road. [379]*379They produced substantial competent, believable evidence of having posted warning signs to substantiate their contention, no one seriously disputing such circumstances, mute evidence of which was a photograph of a warning sign posted at or near the entry to the claimed private road. Without the Combe evidence and testimony, we think this case determinable by the plaintiffs’ own evidence and testimony. Abstracted, here it is:

Plaintiffs called numerous witnesses, most of whom were either property owners abutting or straddling the road in question, having deraigned title directly or indirectly from homesteader, Michael Combe. Thus they were not a part of the general public, but were interested persons entitled individually to use the road personally in virtue of their documentary title, and they or their personal visitors cannot be numbered in the class of members of the general public using such road in a fashion that might ripen into a dedication of a road under the statute. They, of course, could testify as to what others not so situate might have done to perfect a dedication, including, if they could prove it, daily Greyhound Lines passengers who may have desired to view the rather Godforsaken rocks and sagebrush beyond the cul-de-sac at which father Michael’s road through his property came to a screeching halt.

It was conceded that this road never was formally dedicated. In this respect, the plaintiffs seem to be somewhat inconsistent in introducing a so-called “Resolution” of the Weber County Commission, as being a formal dedication,— since such resolution obviously was an abortion and no evidence of dedication whatsoever, since it did not presume to represent any kind of condemnation or sale. Any other conclusion would condone by “Resolution” the establishment of a public highway and an ingress into and egress out of the Weber Club premises and its parking lot. The same reasoning applies to the exhibit of the County Surveyor’s office that “considered” this road to be a public way; and to aerial maps, and to other charts and maps that indulge in the same type of conjecture and prestidigitation.

Plaintiffs’ own witnesses said: That the property beyond this cul-de-sac was rocky, oakbrushed, and had no allure for the public. Mrs. Anna Martinet, who had a personal and titled right to use the road, stated she had seen the posted warning signs, which was confirmed by Mrs. Bertha Martinet, who had property rights to or on the road, by deed.

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Petersen v. Combe
438 P.2d 545 (Utah Supreme Court, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
438 P.2d 545, 20 Utah 2d 376, 1968 Utah LEXIS 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petersen-v-combe-utah-1968.