Pritchard v. Atkinson

4 N.H. 9
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJanuary 15, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 N.H. 9 (Pritchard v. Atkinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pritchard v. Atkinson, 4 N.H. 9 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1827).

Opinion

Richardson, C. J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

We have, on another occasion, decided in this cause that the record of the doings of the selectmen of Boseawen in 1796 is so materially defective, that it cannot be received as evidence of a highway : and we shall now proceed to examine the question which arises upon the case as now stated, whether it might legally be left to a jury to infer that the defendant had dedicated the way to the public, from the facts, that the road was actually laid out and made in 1796, and bad been used as a public highway with the knowledge of the defendant, and without any objection on his part, from that time fill 1813, when he conveyed the land to the plaintiff? Or, in other words, whether it might be presumed from these facts that the defendant had assented to its beebming a public highway without receiving any compensation ?

“ There is” says Lord Mansfield, “ a great difference between length, of time which operates as a bar to a claim, and that which is used only by way of evidence. A jury is concluded by length of time that operates as a bar, as where the statute of limitations is pleaded in bar to a debt ; though the jury is satisfied that íhé debt is due and unpaid it is still a bar. So in the case of prescription, if it be time out of mind, a jury is bound to conclude the right from that prescription, if there could be a legal commencement of the right. But any written evidence showing that there was a time when the prescription did not exist is an answer to a claim founded on prescription. But length of time used merely by way of evidence maybe left to the consideration of the jury to be credited or not, and to draw their inference one way or the other according to circumstances.” Cowper 108.

[12]*12Length of time, when it amounts to a bar, is always a fixed period. In England, the time of memory is fixed to the commencement of the reign of Richard the First, which was the 7th of July, 1189. Every thing done before that time is said to be before the time of memory, and every thing done since is within the time of memory. If a prescription can be shown not to have existed at any time since the 7th July, 1189, it cannot be supported. 2 Rolle's Ab. 269.

So both in England and this country, when length of time is made a bar to an action, real or personal, it is a fixed period.

As a writ of right, which is the highest remedy known to the law for the recovery of land, is in England limited to sixty years, it has been thought there, that the time of memory in relation to prescriptions should be by parity of reason limited to the same period ; because prescriptive rights are in their nature inferior to land. 2 Rolle's Ab. 260. And in this state, as all the remedies in common use to recover lands are in general barred by an uninterrupted adverse possession, for twenty years, it would seem that, upon principle, an uninterrupted and constant use of a way over land for twenty years should be conclusive evidence of a right. But the law is settled to be otherwise. Such a possession and use is evidence of a right but not conclusive evidence.

In the case now before us, it is not disputed, that, if the way had been constantly used with the knowledge of the defendant for twenty years, it would have been evidence of a dedication of it to the use of the public. But it is contended that no use of the way for any period short of twenty years is evidence of such dedication. It seems to us that it will be difficult to maintain this ground upon principle. For if it was expedient and proper to make by statute the peaceable adverse possession of land for twenty years conclusive evidence of a right, how it can be that an uninterrupted use of an easement for nineteen [13]*13years is no evidence of a right, is not very easily conceived. But this is a question to be settled by authority.

It is said to be a rule of law in England, that if a man build a bridge and it becomes useful to the county in general, the county shall repair it. 5 Burr. 2597; 2 W. Bl. 685; 2 East, 356, note; 353, note; and 342 The King v. The West Riding, Yorkshire; 1 Salk. 359; 12 East, 192; 7 East, 588; 5 Taunt. 285; 2 Chitty’s C. L. 589.

And we have decided that when individuals erect a bridge and dedicate it to the public, as soon as it has been used long enough to show its public utility, the repair of it becoms a charge upon the public. It is not necessary it should be used twenty years to become so, but it depends upon the enquiry whether it be of public utilty. 2 N. H. Rep. 513, The State v. Campton,

It must not be supposed, however, that individuals can impose a burthen of this kind upon towns, by building slight bridges over streams in any place where they may choose. Such attempts may be indicted and punished as nuisances. 2 East, 348. it is when they have been used long enough to show their utility without being treated as nuisances, that they become a charge upon the town. 1. Pick 188.

And it has been held in England, that a private individual who builds a street or otherwise opens a thoroughfare to the public, without erecting any bar to preserve his right of stoppage, or even throws open a passage without any visible mark of exclusion or prohibition to persons using it, will, after the expiration of six years, be considered as having dedicated it to the public. 2 Chitty’s C. L. 566; 11 East, 375, note; 1 Camp. 260.

Some doubt has since been expressed whether a dedication could be presumed in so short a time. 5 Taunt 124, Woodyer v. Hadden. And it is very clear, that under all circumstances it could not be presumed in so short a time. It was held in the case last cited, that after nineteen years, the street could not, under the circumstances-[14]*14be considered as dedicated to the public for all purposes. Much depends upon the circumstances. When an individual deliberately throws open a road to the public, and permits it to be travelled by all without interruption, we have no doubt that in much less time than twenty years these facts might be left to a jury as evidence of a dedication.

Lord Ellenborough says, 6 East, 215, “ I take it that twenty year’s exclusive enjoyment of the water in any particular manner, affords a conclusive presumption of right in the party so enjoying it, derived from grant or act of parliament. But less than twenty year’s enjoyment may or may not afford such presumption, according as it is attended with circumstances to support or rebut the right.” 1 Camp. 463, Dalston v. Bensted.

It has been decided that an uninterrupted use of a private way for twenty years might be left to a jury as evidence of a grant. 3 East, 294, Campbell v. Wilson; 2 Pick. 466, Hill v. Crosby; 14 Mass. Rep. 49, Gayety v. Bethune; 5 B. & A. 454, Wood v. Veal.

So the use of a market for twenty-three years was held to be competent evidence to be left to a jury to prove a grant. 1 Bos. & Puller, 400, Holcroft v. Hul, which is explained in 3 East, 298; 2 Saund. 175, note 2.

Payment of a bond may be presumed after eighteen or nineteen years under some circumstances. 1 D. & E. 272; 10 Johns. 381.

So a person who has been absent seven years and nothing heard of him for that time, may be presumed, under some circumstances, to be dead. Phillip’s Ev. 152.

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11 N.H. 407 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1840)

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4 N.H. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritchard-v-atkinson-nhsuperct-1827.