Ricioli v. Lynch

223 P. 88, 65 Cal. App. 53, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 85
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 24, 1923
DocketCiv. No. 2651.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 223 P. 88 (Ricioli v. Lynch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ricioli v. Lynch, 223 P. 88, 65 Cal. App. 53, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 85 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

FINCH, P. J.

The plaintiff had judgment and the defendants appeal.

The complaint alleges: “That for more than forty years last past continuously, the predecessors in interest of plaintiff and this plaintiff have been and are now the owners and *55 entitled to the possession of an easement which is annexed and appurtenant to the lands of plaintiff of a road leading from the said lands of plaintiff across the lands of defendants and that the lands of the said defendants are subservient to the said way and easement, . . . [here follows a description of the road by courses and distances] and for more than forty years last past the said way and easement has been open, laid out, and used by the plaintiff and his predecessors in interest continuously and under a claim of right and with right openly, notoriously, uninterruptedly, and adversely to the said defendants and their predecessors in interest and each and every of them.” The answer denies the foregoing averments of the complaint and alleges that the road is a private road maintained by the defendants “for their special and particular use and not otherwise,” and that plaintiff and his predecessors in interest, upon payment of an annual fee of ten dollars, have been allowed to use the road “by the permission and courtesy and consent” of defendants and their predecessors in interest and not otherwise. The court found in accordance with the allegations of the complaint and, further, that for more than five years prior to the commencement of this action the plaintiff had used said road.

The defendants and their predecessors in interest, at all times herein mentioned, have owned two tracts of land, known as their upper and lower ranches. Since the year 1876 the plaintiff and Ms predecessors in interest have owned a large tract of land above defendants’ lower ranch and during all that time up to October, 1921, have traveled the road in controversy. The road' enters the lower ranch from a county road and runs past the defendants’ residence up to that of plaintiff and to the residence on the upper ranch. The road has always been used also by defendants and their tenants and by a few others owning land above the lower ranch. The lands of defendants were owned by their father, John Lynch, at all times herein mentioned, up to his death in 1915, and defendants have been the owners thereof since. Plaintiff’s land was acquired by Nick Nisson in the year 1876, and at his death in 1899 it passed to his heirs who, in 1913, sold the land to plaintiff. The road in controversy is about three miles in length, two miles thereof being below the Lynch residence on the lower ranch and *56 one mile above. It was in existence from the residence down to the county road prior to the year 1876. In that year Nick Nisson put a gate in the line fence between his land and the lower ranch, since which time the road has been traveled for its entire length as stated. The course of the road is through adobe soil and, about 1887 or 1888, John Lynch requested the persons living above the lower ranch who used the road to help gravel it. One witness, Mark Harden, testified: “Mr. Lynch himself came to all of us and asked us to come over and help gravel that road, and all travel it. And we went over there, and we worked that road, we worked for two or three months the first year with men and teams, and we graveled every bit of that road, Mr. Nisson and us, . . . and all of us turned out and traveled that road. . . . And we have traveled that road ever since and we have worked it every year except the last, couple of years, . . . and kept it up and kept it in good condition. . . . Mr. Nisson and myself and my brother, all of us, we went to Mr. Lynch and talked to him and got him to put those patent gates up, and we agreed to pay so much a year towards keeping those gates up. ... We settled on five dollars a year on the start, and as the gates grew older, Mr. Lynch charged us more. ... I really never held any claim to the road, but still I always felt as though I had the right to travel it because I have done an awful lot of work on there. Three years ago we furnished men and horses for two weeks on that road to help fix it, and haul gravel over it, and I always felt as though I was entitled to travel it, but I did not claim to own it. . . . Before this road was graveled we traveled through there, we hauled blocks through there ten years before that, . . . without consent and without objection, and without paying anything and without any opposition in the world. . . . I don’t know of anybody that has ever asked permission," and I don’t know of anybody that has been refused. As long as Mr. Lynch lived, he never said a word, and nobody else had ever said a word to me. ’ ’ Other witnesses for plaintiff gave similar testimony. The evidence shows without conflict that plaintiff and his predecessors in interest and their tenants helped to gravel the road and keep it in repair.

Eric Nisson, a brother of Nick, testified that at one time Nick said he had “permission” to travel the road, had the *57 “privilege to go through”; that witness did not know whether Nick said “he had the privilege to go through or the right to go through.” Defendant J. A. Lynch, who was born in 1861, testified that in the year 1876 Nick Nisson “asked father’s permission to go through and use the Lynch road . . . and told him how he would care for the road and put in gates and that father would suffer no loss from his going through. . . . He [Lynch] at last consented. . . . And father says: ‘Very well, Mr. Nisson, I will object to your hauling in the heavy season, for if I did, I would soon have no fields. ’ . . . He [Nisson] commenced [using the road] the second day afterwards. . . . He had to do a little work to get over the line fence where he put in a gate. . . . Mr. Layton Harden and Mr. Mark Harden began to use it, I think in 1883 or 1884. Permission was first asked by Layton Harden, and a little while after that by Mark Harden. ... I remember Mr. Thorp making blocks . . . on the Jeff Harden Place ... in the early eighties. . . . He used the Lynch road. ... It was outside teams that were hauling the rock . . . and father, for protection, charged for hauling the rocks, I think by the thousand.” The witness further testified that he never heard his father say anything about using the road except to Nisson, as stated, but that the neighbors above the lower ranch who used the road paid an annual road fee for the privilege. Witnesses for plaintiff testified that such annual fees were not paid for the use of the road but for the maintenance of the patent gates. This annual fee was first fixed at five dollars for each user of the road and later raised to ten dollars, and after the death of John Lynch it was increased to fifteen dollars for at least some of the users.

Appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings, in that it shows respondent and his predecessors in interest were mere licensees. It must be assumed, in support of the findings, that the annual fees referred to were paid for the maintenance of the gates and not for the use of the road. The evidence amply establishes that there was an open, visible, continuous, and unmolested use of the road for more than forty years prior to the commencement of the action. As said in Fleming v. Howard, 150 Cal. 28, 30 [87 Pac. 908], “under these circumstances it will be presumed that the use was under a claim

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 P. 88, 65 Cal. App. 53, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ricioli-v-lynch-calctapp-1923.