State v. Miller

125 S.E. 298, 123 S.E. 298, 130 S.C. 152, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 11, 1924
Docket11606
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 S.E. 298 (State v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Miller, 125 S.E. 298, 123 S.E. 298, 130 S.C. 152, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 81 (S.C. 1924).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Marion.

This is the second appeal from a conviction of the defendants under an indictment charging that on December 2, 1922, they “did unlawfully obstruct a neighborhood road,” etc.

On the former appeal (125 S. C., 289; 118 S. E., 624) this Court sustained defendant’s contention that they were entitled to have the jury instructed as follows:

“The rule in this State is that a prescriptive right arises in favor of the public after continuous use of a road for *154 2U years, when it runs through cultivated land, but that, when is passes over uninclosed woodland, it must also be shown that the use was adverse and under a claim of right, and not by the owner’s permission.”

On the second trial in the circuit Court the defendants moved for a directed verdict upon the ground, among others, that there was no evidence tending to establish that the 20 years’ continuous user of the road in question, relied on by the State to establish a prescriptive right in favor of the public, was adverse. Whether the verdict should have been directed upon that ground is a question which is decisive of this appeal on its merits. Our attention will therefore be wholly directed to a consideration of that question.

A correct determination of the question is not free from difficulty. That the road which defendants were charged with obstructing was, and had been from the beginning, a road through uninclosed woodland is, as we understand, not disputed by the State. In any event the evidence is open to no other reasonable inference than that the road here in controversy was a road of that character. That fact affirmatively appealing, under the law of this State, as recognized and laid down in the decision of this Court on the former appeal, it was clearly incumbent upon the State to establish not only a continuous use of the road by the public for a period of 20 years or more, but that such “use was adverse and under a claim of right.” Somewhat more specifically stated our inquiry, therefore, is whether there was any evidence which as a matter of law would warrant the inference of adverse use of a road through uninclosed woodland.

In resolving that inquiry certain expressions of our Court bearing upon the rationale of the rule above adverted to, which recognizes a difference and makes a distinction between cultivated land and uninclosed woodland in this matter of establishing a highway or neighborhood road by prescription, are pertinent, and should be borne in mind. *155 In Sims v. Davis, Cheves, 1, 38 Am. Dec., 581, Judge Evans, speaking for the Court, said:

“As a general rule, I would say that the use of every such way is permissive, or held at sufferance, where the claimant has done no act showing that he claimed the right adversely, and the allowance of the use by the- owner of the soil has been unaccompanied by any act which shows a recognition, on his part, of the right of the claimant to use the road without his permission. Most of the old roads which, like this, lead from one public road to another, or from neighborhood to neighborhood, sprung up from accident. 'In the early settlement of the country, paths through the woods were made by repeated traveling along the same track. In process of time, by continued use, these tracks were enlarged into cart and wagon ways. They were convenient to the proprietor’s neighbors and did not interfere with his dominion over the land. In the beginning, therefore, they may be said to have originated in the tacit permission of the owner. The use continued in the same way, no one ever supposing that a use thus commencing could ever ripen into a right. An adverse use must be something for which the owner may sue. It must be something hostile to his entire dominion over his property.”

In Hutto v. Tindall, 6 Rich. 396, cited and quoted with approved in the opinion on the former appeal in this case, the Court said:

“A distinction must therefore be observed, between the claim of a way through inclosed and cultivated land, and of a way over uninclosed woodland. In the former case, the mere use is an invasion of property, and a trespass, and acquiescence or submission to the exercise of a privilege, under circumstances which make it actionable, may justify the inference of a legal right in the person who exercises the privilege. Tut when the way passes over woodland those who travel it commit no trespass (at least not until after notice to desist), and subjects the owner to no loss or *156 inconvenience. To prohibit them would be considered churlish, and would be ineffectual, unless a constant watch was kept to prevent them. And to require the owner to secure his land against an adverse claim, by a use not actionable, of a way over it, would to that extent exclude his property-from the protection of the law.”

The foregoing expressions are sufficient to indicate that the rule requiring that in addition to proof of the continuous' use of a road for'20 years or moré in order to establish a prescriptive right, “when it passes over' uninclosed woodland it must also be shown that the user was adverse,” proceeds upon the theory, soundly grounded in conditions which are a matter of common knowledge in this country, that the user of a road through uninclosed woodland is, in effect; a user by license or permission of the owner' of the land. Hence the mere fact of a' public use of such' a road for any length of time will not sustain a claim of public right by prescription in the way (see Fanning v. Stroman, 113 S. C., 495, 498; 101 S. E., 861; 29 C. J., 377, § 9), since, as was said by Chief Justice Marshall in Kirk v. Smith, etc., 9 Wheat. 288, 6 L. Ed. 91: “It would shock that sense of right which must be felt equally by legislators and by judges, if a possession which was permissive, and entirely consistent with the title of another, should silently bar that.title.”

That proposition necessarily embraces the point that mere use by the public of a way through uninclosed woodland for any length of time is insufficient of. itself to support the inference that the use was adverse and hostile to- the rights of the owner. The decision of this Cpurt in State v. Toale, 74 S. C., 425, 429; 54 S. E., 608, relied upon by the State to support a contrary contention, is not in conflict with that view. It is true the reporter’s abstract of the holding in that case is somewhat misleading. The Court did not there hold, as stated in the syllabus, that:

*157 “Testimony.tending to show that a well-defined road was laid out through uninclosed woodland, and used by the public for more than 20 years, is some evidence of adverse user.”

What the Court really held, after stating certain testimony adduced at the trial, was as follows:

“This testimony tends to show that the road ran through the land at a time when it was not inclosed (uninclosed) woodland; that a well-defined road was laid out; and that the use thereof was adverse.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.E. 298, 123 S.E. 298, 130 S.C. 152, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-miller-sc-1924.