Scruggs v. Beason

20 So. 2d 774, 246 Ala. 405, 1945 Ala. LEXIS 288
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 1, 1945
Docket7 Div. 808.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 20 So. 2d 774 (Scruggs v. Beason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scruggs v. Beason, 20 So. 2d 774, 246 Ala. 405, 1945 Ala. LEXIS 288 (Ala. 1945).

Opinion

STAKELY, Justice.

This is an appeal from, a final decree of the equity court enjoining J. D. Scruggs (appellant) from placing a fence and gate across a road. In the bill, filed by J. H. Beason and L. M. Bagett (appellees), the roid is alleged to be a public road. Two questions are presented for our review, first, whether the appellees have such an interest in the alleged public road as to enable them to maintain the action and, second, whether the road is a public road. The first -question is presented on demurrer to the bill, which was overruled by the court. The second question arises on the evidence. The witnesses were examined orally before the court.

On a hill about 600 feet north of Federal Highway No. 11 in St. Clair County, Alabama, is located a country graveyard, known as the Choat Graveyard. It had its beginning in the early part of the settlement in which it existed. There are about 120 graves in the graveyard, the date of the earliest one being 1868. From that time to the present, it has been used as a burying ground by the surrounding community, burials therein being made from time to time. On particular occasions the members of the community would meet to clear off the cemetery and keep it in order. It is connected with the Federal highway by the road in question, which offers the only means of ingress and egress to and from the graveyard. The fence and gate, the subject of the present controversy, were placed across the road at the entrance to the road from the Federal highway. Buried in the graveyard, among others, are the father, mother and two sons of J. H. Beason (one of the appellees). The father, mother and two -brothers of L. M. Bagett (one of the appellees) are buried there. The complainants are householders and own land in the community. In addition to alleging that the road is a public road, the bill shows in substance the foregoing facts.

The obstruction of a public road is á public nuisance. Walls et al. v. Smith & Co. et al., 167 Ala. 138, 52 So. 320, 140 Am.St.Rep. 24; Weiss et al. v. Taylor et al., 144 Ala. 440, 39 So. 519. Generally a public nuisance gives no right of action to an individual, but must be abated by process instituted in the name of the state. An individual complaining of a public nuisance must show some special injury to himself different from the common injury to the public. Walls et al. v. Smith & Co. et al., supra; City of Selma v. Jones, 202 Ala. 82, 79 So. 476, L.R.A.1918, 1020; McIntosh v. Moody, 228 Ala. 165, *408 153 So. 182; Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Higginbotham, 153 Ala. 334, 44 So. 872; § 1084, Title 7, Code of 1940.

It is clear, however, that appellees have such interest in -the alleged public road which leads from the Federal highway to the cemetery as to give them the right to. injunctive relief. Complainants are members of the community and have members of their families buried in a cemetery used for burial purposes by the community. Complainants, with other members of the community, care for the upkeep of the cemetery. The public road offers the only means of entry to and from the graveyard. A cemetery is a place not only for the burial of the dead, but for an expression of love and respect by the living for the dead. Hence there must be accorded to complainants not only the right of burial but also the right to visit, maintain and beautify the graves of relatives interred therein, without obstruction in the public road. Nelson v. Randolph, 222 Ill. 531, 78 N.E. 914; Mayo v. Schumer, Mo.App., 256 S.W. 549; 10 Am.Jur. p. 510; 10 Am.Jur. p. 514; 68 A.L.R. page 1293. See also Weiss et al. v. Taylor et al., supra. The court was not in error in overruling the demurrer to the bill.

Was the road leading from the Federal highway to the cemetery a public road? Appellant insists that whatever use was made of the roadway was permissive only. Tendencies of the evidence, in addition to the facts set forth above, showed in substance the following:

The road, according to the knowledge of living witnesses, had been open and used by the community to get to the cemetery for about sixty years. It was worked and kept up by the combined efforts of the people of the community. The property on each side of the road was originally owned by different persons, although now owned by the appellant. The road runs from the Federal highway a distance of about 300 feet to the foot of the hill on which the cemetery is located, then up the hill about 300 feet to the cemetery. The lands to the foot of the hill have been in cultivation as far back as the memory of the oldest witnesses goes. The oldest witnesses were seventy-odd years of age. Until the stock laws went into effect about thirty years ago, according to witnesses, there had been rail fences on both sides of the road from the Federal highway to the foot of the hill. The distance between ■the fences was twenty-three or twenty-four feet. There was a drainage ditch on each side of the road. The road was never laid' out by the county or dedicated by legal' proceedings. The lands to the foot of the hill were changed into pasture lands in about 1942.

There was evidence to sustain complainants’ theory of the use of the roadway by the public generally, for a longer period than twenty years continuously and uninterruptedly without let or hindrance.. Under our cases, this is sufficient -to raise a presumption of dedication to public use by the owner.

“ ‘As a general rule it seems now settled in this state that an open, defined roadway, in continuous use by the public as a-highway, without let or hindrance, for a period of 20 years, becomes ‘a public highway by prescription. With qualification as to wild, unused, or uninclosed lands, a presumption of dedication or other appropriation to public use arises. The burden is on the landowner to show the user was permissive only, in recognition of his title and right -to reclaim the possession.’ ” Ritter v. Hewitt, 236 Ala. 205, 208, 181 So. 289, 291.

See also Locklin v. Tucker, 208 Ala. 155, 93 So. 896.

How does appellant seek to differentiate the situation in the case at bar so as to-make the foregoing statement of principle inapplicable? The bases of difference maybe stated as follows.

1. It is contended that photographs introduced in evidence show the roadway to be a mere trail, without signs of user. The photographs show at best, only a faintly visible, poorly kept roadway. But a highway may be public, though little travelled and though it may afford facilities for travel only to such persons as reside in the community and not useful to the public generally. Dunn & Lallande Bros. v. Gunn, 149 Ala. 583, 42 So. 686; Thrasher v. Burr et al., 202 Ala. 307, 80 So. 372. Here the use of the road was for-the members of a small country community in going to and from infrequent burials-in a small burying ground and in infrequent trips to and from the graveyard to-keep it in some degree of order. “It is the character rather than the quantum of use that controls.” Still et al. v. Lovelady, 218 Ala. 19, 117 So. 481.

2. It is claimed that the road un-til shortly before this suit' extended two miles. *409 beyond the cemetery to a church known as Union Church, and that such extension, •together with that part of the roadway from the foot of the hill to the graveyard, runs through wild and unreclaimed lands Hence it is insisted that there is no presumption of dedication. Newell v. Dempsey, 219 Ala. 634, 122 So.

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20 So. 2d 774, 246 Ala. 405, 1945 Ala. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scruggs-v-beason-ala-1945.