Russell v. Napier

9 S.E. 746, 82 Ga. 770
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 13, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 9 S.E. 746 (Russell v. Napier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. Napier, 9 S.E. 746, 82 Ga. 770 (Ga. 1889).

Opinion

Simmons, Justice.

Russell filed his bill against Napier, on January 12, 1887, alleging that in December, 1878, he purchased from defendant a certain tract of land, together with the right to the free and uninterrupted use of private road leading from the tract into a public road. Eor the land and for the use of this way he paid defendant $400 at the time of the purchase, but defendant made him no deed then to the land, but it was agreed at the time that defendant should make a deed to the land and right to the use of the way as soon as defendant obtained a deed. The land which complainant purchased did not lie on any public road, and the right to the private way was included in its sale and was a part of the consideration of the payment made by complainant, there being no other way leading from the land to the public road except the one purchased. Defendant had purchased the land which he sold complainant and an adjoining lot, number 268, at a sale made by the administrator of T. T. Napier, prior to the sale by defendant to complainant. Lot 268, through which the private way in question runs, adjoins-the land purchased by complainant and lies between it and the public road, and the private way mentioned had been located where complainant claims the right to use it tor a long time prior to the purchase mentioned, and has been used as a way from the land bought by complainant to the public road by T. T. Napier and those owning the land through which it passes. The land purchased by complainant and also [772]*772lot 268 had been owned for a long time before his death by T. T. Napier, and defendant still owns lot 268. The private way in question was pointed out to complainant by defendant as the way which complainant was to have the right to use, in the event he purchased the land, at the time he did so purchase, and complainant refused to buy the land until the right to the use of the way was included in the sale, and complainant would not have purchased without such right. After complainant had bought the land and the right to use the way, he went into possession of the land and commenced to use the way so purchased, to wit, about the 28th of December, 1878. He has remained in j)ossession of the land and is still in possession of it and he used the way continuously, uninten’uptedly, etc. up to March 22,1886, when defendant, without authority of law and contrary to the contract, closed it up by building a fence across it on lot 268, and it. is still closed by said fence. This act of defendant has forced complainant to travel to and from the public road over another way which is much farther and rougher than the way which has been closed by defendant. Defendant lived oji the adjoining lot all the time that complainant was in possession of the land bought by him, and at no time made objection to the use by complainant of the way first above mentioned, but always recognized that complainant had the right to use it. Defendant made no deed to complainant until November 29, 1880, when he had a deed prepared and signed, in which he conveyed the land only. Complainant refused to accept this deed because it did not include the right to the use of the way, and defendant then admitted that it had been agreed that this right should be included, and said it had been omitted by oversight, and that he did not have time to have another deed drawn, but insisted that complainant should take the [773]*773deed already prepared, and in a short time he. would execute to complainant a conveyance of the right to use the way. Believing that he would do this, complainant accepted the deed. ■ He has demanded of defendant such a conveyance, and defendant refuses to comply with his contract, and has closed the way up. The way in question is necessary for the proper"enjoyment of the land purchased, and for deprivation of it complainant cannot ho compensated in damages, etc. The bill prays that defendant be compelled to execute to complainant a conveyance to the use of the way, and that free use of the same be decreed to be-in complainant, for general relief, etc.

. The defendant answered the bill and denied every material allegation therein. He positively denied that there was any contract made between him and the complainant for the purchase of the right of way over his land, which adjoined the land purchased by the complainant. The only thing agreed on . between them about this right of way was, that he agreed to allow the complainant to use the right of way until he (the der fendant) desired to clear up the land. - In that event the road was to be closed. On the trial of the case the jury returned a verdict for the defendant. The complainant made a- motion for a new trial on the several grounds stated therein, which motion was overruled, and he excepted.

1. It will be observed, by-reading the synopsis of the complainant’s bill, that the way in controversy in this case was claimed by the complainant upon three grounds: (1) by contract of purchase; (2) by prescription ; and (3) as a way of necessity. It is insisted by the plaintiff in error that the verdict was contrary to the evidence. "We have read the evidence .sent up in the record, upon the question of the purchase of the [774]*774right of way, and while it is conflicting, the jury seem to have believed the defendant and his witnesses in preference to the complainant and his witnesses. The court below was satisfied with the verdict, and we will not disturb it.

2. The same may be said as to the second ground, to wit, that he was. entitled to the way by prescription. Evidence was introduced by both parties upon this point. It was conflicting as to the length of time the road has been used, and as to whether it had been kept in repair by the complainant as required by law. The weight of testimony seems to be that it was not kept in repair by the complainant, and that the original roadbed Was not used for the length of time prescribed by the statute; that trees were allowed to fall across the road, and instead of cutting them off, another way around the trees was used; and we think there was sufficient evidence on this point to authorize the finding of the jury.

3. The complainant also claimed the way as one of necessity. Upon this point the evidence showed that the complainant had purchased other land from Mrs. "Wooten, and made a road over this land to the public road, which according to some of the evidence was a better way than the one in controversy. The plaintiff in error objected to this evidence, and assigns error therein in the 3d and 4th grounds of the motion. We do not think it was error to admit this testimony. If the complainant had purchased other land and made a way over it to the public road, then the original road, the one in controversy, would no longer be a way of necessity. The new road would destroy the old one as a way of necessity. A person is not allowed to claim a road over another’s land as a road or way of necessity, when he has, or can have, a road over his own land. [775]*775Washburn, in his work on Easements and Servitudes, p. 285 (3d ed.), says : “ And so limited is the right of way of necessity in respect to its duration, that, though it remains appurtenant to the land in favor of which it is raised so long as the owner thereof has no other mode of access, yet the moment the owner of such a way acquires, by purchase of other land or otherwise, a way of access from a highway over his own land to the land to which the way belongs, the way of necessity is at an end ; or in other words, a way of necessity ceases as soon as the necessity ceases.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 S.E. 746, 82 Ga. 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-napier-ga-1889.