Power v. Dean

86 S.W. 1100, 112 Mo. App. 288, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 126
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 18, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 86 S.W. 1100 (Power v. Dean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Power v. Dean, 86 S.W. 1100, 112 Mo. App. 288, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 126 (Mo. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

This action of trespass was brought before a justice of the peace. The complaint is in two counts. The first alleges that on May 1, 1903, and continuously since that time, plaintiff was the owner and in possession of the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 32, township 66, range 10; that he had said tract of land inclosed by a wire fence on or about May 2, 1903, and the defendant unlawfully and voluntarily tore loose said fence, pulled up the posts at the southeast corner of the tract and for about five rods east of said corner and left the same down; that in consequence stock escaped into plaintiff’s field and damaged his crops. Judgment for five dollars and twice the damage inflicted was prayed in accordance with section 1573 of the Revised Statutes of 1899. The second count of the complaint is exactly like the first except that it charges defendants with having torn down the wire fencing at the northwest corner of plaintiff’s land, instead of the southwest corner.

The cause was removed to the circuit court on the ground that title to land was involved, where it was tried and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for five dollars, on which judgment was entered and the defendant appealed to this court.

All the parties are neighboring farmers and the controversy is in regard to a strip of ground which the defendants contend was a public road; or at least that they owned the right to travel over the strip — in other words, enjoyed an easement in it. Plaintiff, on the other hand, contends said strip is part of his land; and on that assumption he inclosed it with wire fences on the north and south sides, thus including it in his forty-[291]*291acre inclosure and obstructing travel over it. The defendants cut down those fences and this action is to recover damages for the alleged trespass.

The controversy can be understood only by a study of the arrangement of the farms and roads in the locality ; hence a plat of the neighborhood is inserted:

[292]*292Charles Power, the plaintiff, owns the forty-acre tract on which his name is printed. Immediately north of his farm is a tract of forty acres owned by the defendant John W. Dean, father of the defendant Wm. Dean; southwest of Charles Power’s tract lies one of forty-two acres owned by the defendant Joseph Power and north of Joseph Power’s tract are seventy-eight acres designated as Peters’ land. The strip of land in controversy, which varies in width from fifteen to twenty feet because of the irregular line of the fences on the west side, lies immediately west of Charles Power’s tract and immediately east of the Joseph Power.and the Peters farms. Prior to 1878 the tract now owned by Charles Power was owned by his mother, Mary J. Power, afterwards Mary J. Beckert. Her.first husband (father of plaintiff) died in 1874 and two years later she married Nicholas Beckert. On August 29, 1878 she and Beckert gave a mortgage on the forty acres to John Shelley. This encumbrance was foreclosed and by purchase at the foreclosure sale J. M. Shelley became the owner of the land November 11, 1882. On December 20, 1888, Shelley conveyed to Charles Power, (the plaintiff) who previously had obtained a deed from his mother. Mary J. Beckert lived with her second husband but a few years when he went to Colorado hunting a home. She heard from him during the first year or two' of his absence but no more. At the time of the trial of this action he had been absent and unheard of for about twenty years. Pour or five farmers who were neigbors of Mrs. Beckert owned timber lands about two miles south of her home. Among them were Joseph Power and Wesley Tucker. The latter then owned the Dean land which he sold to Dean some thirteen years ago. About twenty-five years ago the country in that vicinity was largely unfenced, and the timber-owners had access to their timber lands to the south by the road which runs between the Irwin and the O’Day tracts shown on the plat. It will be seen that this road leads from another public road which extends [293]*293, east and west just south of Charles Power’s land. While the country was open, persons living to the north of the Irwin and O’Day tracts and desiring to travel the road between those tracts, would cut across the southwest comer of Charles Power’s tract (then owned by Mrs. Power-Beckert) and across the northeast corner of the Peter’s land. The public road running along the north side of the Dean and Peters land communicated with the roads to the south through this open country. Immediately north of the Dean farm is the public school of the neighborhood, situated on an east and wesit highway and just east of the land marked as the Adams tract. When the proprietors began to inclose their farms, communication between the north and south roads was interrupted, thereby causing special inconvenience to the owners of those timber lands which lay, as stated, two miles or more south of the O’Day and Irwin tracts. To obviate this difficulty Wesley Tucker, who then owned the Dean farm, agreed to give a strip fifteen feet wide off the west side of his land for a roadway, provided a strip of the same width was procured from Mrs. Power, so there would be a road fifteen feet wide leading from the public road running by the schoolhouse and north of Dean’s land, to the road which lay south of the Power tract and runs east and west. By obtaining access to the latter road over said strip the persons interested could pass from it into the road between the Irwin and O’Day tracts and thence to their timber, as they had before. Mrs. Beckert agreed to give the strip for a small money consideration. She was paid and set her fence back along the entire west side of her forty acres for fifteen feet, the present plaintiff assisting in the work. He knew of the contract with his mother and testified about it. In truth there is no material disagreement among the witnesses regarding the arrangement with Mrs. Beckert. Tucker set his fence back along the west line of his farm, and thus a roadway from the east and west road on the north to [294]*294the east and west road on the south, was opened. The surface of the strip was cut up with gullies and bushes and trees grew over it. It was worked into condition for travel by cutting down the trees and bushes, filling the gullies and building a sort of bridge over the largest one. The road thus constructed remained open for twenty years or more before the alleged trespass by the defendants and was traveled continuously until ■ the plaintiff ran fences across it at the northwest and southwest corners of his farm in May, 1903. Everbody who had occasion to travel over the road did so without objection; but it was used most by those persons who had procured it in order to reach their timber. It seemed that for a while Dean and Power kept a wire fence across the north and south ends, but with gates in the fences so that travel would not be obstructed. The fences and gates were put in for the purpose of making a cattle lot of the strip, but with the understanding that travel should not be interfered with. The evidence' shows conclusively that those fences were not intended by Power as an assertion of a right to close the strip or deprive any person of the right to travel over it. The effect of the testimony on this point is that as the road was not a main highway, there was comparatively little travel over it and the neighbors specially interested were willing it should be used as an inclosure for cattle, provided gates were made so they could pass through when they wished. Just when these fences and gates were put in and when they were abandoned, the evidence leaves uncertain.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gibson v. Sharp
277 S.W.2d 672 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1955)
Majors v. Bush
200 S.W.2d 892 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1947)
Schroer v. Brooks
224 S.W. 53 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1920)
Geismann v. Trish
132 S.W. 298 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1910)
Rice v. Wade
111 S.W. 594 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1908)
Graham v. Olson
92 S.W. 728 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 S.W. 1100, 112 Mo. App. 288, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/power-v-dean-moctapp-1905.