Scott v. Black

120 S.E. 167, 95 W. Va. 48, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 217
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 120 S.E. 167 (Scott v. Black) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Black, 120 S.E. 167, 95 W. Va. 48, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 217 (W. Va. 1923).

Opinion

MeREdith, Judge:

Plaintiffs instituted a suit in the circuit court of Kanawha County seeking to enjoin defendant from interfering with their enjoyment of a right of way across defendant’s land. The circuit court refused to issue the injunction, and plaintiffs appeal.

Plaintiffs and defendant own adjoining farm lands in Union District, Kanawha County. Defendant’s farm lies between the lands of the plaintiffs and the 'main county road. Prior to September 26, 1887, all the lands, now the property of plaintiffs and defendant, were owned by A. J. -Robinson, Sr.; on that date, however, -he with his wife, Lucretia, conveyed two tracts aggregating 150 acres, out of which plaintiffs’ several farms are carved, to his son, A. J. Robinson, Jr., and'his wife, Mary Ann Robinson. There was also granted in the deed a right of way, through, the land retained by the grantor, to the county road. This land, across which the right of way ran, became by subsequent conveyances the property of defendant, Andrew H..Black. - Plaintiffs trace their titles to A. J. Robinson, Jr. That a right-of way for the benefit of the plaintiffs exists by virtue of this express grant, defendant does not deny. The controversy concerns its location, which was not definitely fixed by the language of the deed. That language reads:

“And the said parties of the first part also grant *50 and convey the right of way over this other land between their two tracts and the nearest county road, as now located for a road 20 feet wide in the most convenient place or places, but at the fences there shall be maintained at all suitable times gates so as not to damage crops, and not to allow the interference of stock of the other land of the party of the first part.”

A. J. Robinson, Jr. moved on the premises in the spring of 1888, and agreed with the grantor, his father, upon a location for the right of way to the county road. It was laid out in a direct course, crossed a small creek on the land of the servient estate, which creek approximately paralleled the county road and flowed within a few feet of it, and intersected the county road at a right angle. The road was plowed, some filling and grading was done, and at some time during its use a wooden bridge or culvert was constructed across the creek. A. J. Robinson, Jr. resided on the farm for a few years only, possibly two or three, during which time he used the right of way for general hauling purposes. He then moved .away for several years moving back on the farm not less than fifteen or sixteen years prior to this suit, when he continued to use the right of way. Apparently, those who occupied the farm during Robinson’s absence also used the outlet to the county road.

His mother, who appears to have succeeded to the estate of her husband, A. J. Rohinson, Sr., upon the latter’s death, continued to occupy the land abutting- the county road, now the property of the defendant. During A. J. Robinson, Jr. ’s second residence on the 150 acres, the bridge, which, according to defendant’s witnesses, had become rotten through decay, was completely washed out by higfy water, and a considerable portion of the road itself, extending back towards the 150 acre tract was flooded. The creek seems to have changed its course for several feet so as to flow back on the road, and seems to have left a bank about four feet high in the traveled way. Whether this condition was brought about immediately seems doubtful; it was probably aggravated by the subsequent abandonment of the right of way at that point. At any rate, Mrs. Lucretia Robinson, as well as A. J. Robinson, Jr. and his wife, desired a more convenient outlet, *51 so, according to Robinson’s testimony, at tbis time, 15 or 16 years prior to this suit, “After the bridge was washed out, me and. my mother changed the road so that it run just above where the bridge was that crossed the creek.”

The change affected a distance of about 150 feet from the county road back to the point of divergence from the old right of way, and, so far as the proof shows, the 150 feet of the old way so abandoned was never used again by plaintiffs or the Robinsons as an outlet. The new course diverges only slightly from the old way, following the creek bank around the newly created bend in the stream and crossing it further up than before. It is about 17 feet wide at its widest point as it follows the bend in the creek, and about 10 feet wide at the narrowest, and, as we understand the testimony, it is 82 feet from the point of divergence from the old route to the point where the present way crosses the creek. By actual measurement it is 71 feet along the county road from the lower edge of the old right of way to the upper edge of the new. Some proof offered by defendant tends to show that the new road forks in two directions where it intersects the county road, but the evidence is indefinite, and in our view immaterial. It seems to us that the proof shows conclusively that a new road along a definite course back to the point of divergence from the old has been the outlet used by plaintiffs and their predecessors in title for the past 15 or 16 years.

However, the defendant, the successor in title of Lucretia Robinson, built an obstruction across the new road, and now insists that plaintiffs must use the old route across the creek, spending whatever money is required to bridge the stream and fill in the washed out road-bed. Certain defense witnesses say that this improvement can be made at an expense of about $60.00 to $80.00. Plaintiffs here seek to restrain any interference with their use of .the new right of way.

Plaintiffs recite in their bill many of the facts which we have outlined, and pray that they may be protected in their enjoyment of the new road for two reasons:

First. Because the road as now located is in the most convenient place, and the improvement of the old route could only be accomplished at great trouble and expense, and,

*52 Second. Because the roadway as now located has been so located and used, uninterruptedly, for more than fifteen years, and was originally so located by the original grantor, Andrew J. Robinson, and the original grantees, Andrew J. Robinson, Jr. and his wife, Mary Ann Robinson.

Paragraph II. of the bill recites the reason for and the fact of the new location by the parties to the Robinson conveyance of 1887.

Defendant’s answer denies that the right of way was relocated in pursuance of any agreement of parties in position to make such arrangement, and avers, on the contrary, that the plaintiffs and their predecessors simply allowed the bridge to rot down, and that they then appropriated new ways for their outlet, as it seemed convenient.

We have already narrated what the proof discloses. A. J. Robinson, Jr. and his wife testify that the route was relocated through arrangement with his mother. Defendant admits his ignorance on this point and is in no' position to refute plaintiffs proof. We have also stated that in our opinion it is sufficiently proved that the new right of way is a definite and fixed course.

The case as presented by the pleadings and proof amounts to this: A- J. Robinson, Jr. was the owner by deed of a right of way or easement over his father’s lands. The deed did not define the boundaries of the right of way, but by subsequent acts the route was fixed by the parties to the grant.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.E. 167, 95 W. Va. 48, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-black-wva-1923.