State Ex Rel. Carter County v. Lewis

294 S.W.2d 954, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 176
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 27, 1956
Docket7498
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 294 S.W.2d 954 (State Ex Rel. Carter County v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Carter County v. Lewis, 294 S.W.2d 954, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 176 (Mo. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

STONE, Judge.

In this action for a mandatory injunction to compel removal- of- all obstructions from an alleged public' road in Cartel County, Missouri, and to enjoin future ob *956 struction of' the road, defendants appeal from a decree granting the requested in-junctive relief. The segment of road in dispute (hereinafter referred to as the disputed road) is approximately 1,866 feet in length and runs in an. irregular northerly and southerly course from the south edge of the country community of Chilton, Missouri,' to the north bank, of Current River. In earlier times, the disputed road forked near the river, with one Branch running, upstream and crossing Current River at the Partney Ford, and with the other branch running downstream and crossing Current River at the Swezea Ford. There was no showing that either ford, or for that matter either branch of the road past the fork, had been used for more than ten years prior to trial, but the evidence definitely established that all who had occasion to do so had continued to travel the disputed road to the north bank of Current River until the Fall of 1953.

For many years (and until 1949, as the testimony indicated), children of school age residing on the south side of Current River were transported across the river by boat to a landing'near the fork in the disputed road and walked over thát road to the Chilton school, and similarly adults living on the south side of Current River crossed the river by boat and used the disputed road as the only available route to the polling place for school and general elections. With the formation of consolidated school districts and the construction of improved state highways.on the south side of Current River, use of the disputed road for the foregoing purposes has diminished in recent years. However, at least one student attending-Ellsinore High School continued to cross Current River and to use . the disputed road regularly during the school year of 1949-1950, and residents on the south side of the river continued to use this road, after crossing the river by boat, to- participate- in -school elections and to reach Chilton for other purposes. And, there was uninterrupted, and apparently unabated, vehicular use of the disputed road — “the only road leading in there in that section of the county” — by those who-went to Current River for fishing, swimming and- other recreational purposes, as well., as by residents of the Chilton community desiring to visit the neighborhood cemetery about one mile downstream on the south side of the river. Defendant,. Roy Lewis, who moved onto the farm,, through which the disputed road runs, in 1940 as manager for one Waymeyer, from whom defendants subsequently purchased the farm in November, 1951, readily conceded the constant and continuing use of the disputed road during the entire period of his residence on the farm. In short,, the evidence abundantly supported the finding of the learned trial chancellor that “the use of said road by the public has been constant, general and continuous since its-establishment in pioneer days, some fifty or more years ago, down to the present time.”

Witness Hampton, 77 years of age at the time of trial, who had been road overseer of the Chilton district from 1910 to 1922, testified positively that he had worked the disputed road (which was in the Chilton district) during each of the twelve years-he had been road overseer, and he also-remembered that his‘father (in a capacity not shown) had worked the disputed road “when I was just a boy.” Witness Chilton, who had lived in the neighborhood from 1910 to 1928, had worked out his poll tax on the disputed road “quite a few years”' during that period, and three other witnesses either had worked out their poll taxes or had observed others working out such taxes on the disputed road at various-times, the latest year specifically designated having been 1934. Witness Coleman, identified as “an operator of the road machinery * in Carter County,” stated that he had “machined” the disputed road “several times,” the last.such occasion having 'been in 1942; and, when asked whether there had been “any public money' expended or any public work performed” on the disputed road after 1940, defendant, *957 Roy Lewis, said that “in 1942 they run a grader over it” — “that was the last time.”

In 1948 or 1949, a cattle guard was installed across the north end of the disputed road, with .a gate at the side to admit those riding on horseback or driving teams. The evidence was conflicting as to whether defendant, Roy Lewis, personally requested permission of the County Court of Carter County to install the cattle guard and gate; hut, in any event, Lewis was present when .either he or Waymeyer (depending upon whose version of the matter he accepted) sought and obtained such permission. The initially professed purpose of installing the cattle guard and gate, thus closing the east- and-west fence line along the north side of the bottom fields in the Waymeyer farm, was to relieve Waymeyer and his then manager, defendant Lewis, of continued maintenance of the north-and-south fences along the disputed road, which segregated and separated the road from the adjoining fields; and, there was no interference with free public use of. the ■ disputed road until the Fall of 1953 when Lewis told the County Highway Engineer, then proposing to grade the road, “to keep out” and shortly thereafter erected “no trespassing” signs, and locked a gate across the north end of. the road, in defiance of an order of the County Court entered on December 7, 1953, which directed him to remove all obstructions from the road. Parenthetically, we note the puzzling and paradoxical testimony of defendant Lewis who, on the one hand, claimed the disputed road as his own but, on the other hand, denied any prior refusal of the right to use this road and disavowed any intention to restrict its future use — “I don’t intend to try to stop anybody.”

The trial chancellor found that the disputed road is a legally established public road under that portion of Section 228.190 which provides that “all roads that have been used as such by the public for ten years continuously, and upon which there shall have been expended public money or labor . for such period, •; shall be deemed legally established roads.” (Except as otherwise shown, all statutory references herein are to RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S.; and, all references to Section 228.190 are to that statute as amended Laws of 1953, p. 674.) To establish a public road under the quoted statutory provision, it 'is not necessary to prove constant expenditure of ‘ public money or labor or, for that matter, expenditure thereof “each and every year for such 10-year period” [Garbee v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co., 220 Mo.App. 1245, 1256, 290 S.W. 655, 658]; but, it is sufficient to show that the expenditure of public money or labor began and “continued from time to time for the period of limitation, as (reasonably) might be considered necessary or expedient by those in authority”. [State v. Macy, 72 Mo.App. 427, 432; State v. Kitchen, 205 Mo.App. 31, 37, 216 S.W. 981, 983] and that such expenditure was sufficient to maintain the road “in substantial repair and condition for * * * public travel.” State v. Kitchen, supra, 216 S.W. loc.cit. 984. See also Anderson v. Birkeland, 229 Minn. 77, 38 N.W.2d 215, 218(5); Town of Wells v. Sullivan, 125 Minn. 353, 147 N.W. 244, 245(4); Hansen v. Town of Verdi, 83 Minn.

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Bluebook (online)
294 S.W.2d 954, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-carter-county-v-lewis-moctapp-1956.