Sumter County v. Brown

102 So. 2d 303, 1958 Fla. App. LEXIS 2813
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedApril 16, 1958
DocketNo. 448
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 102 So. 2d 303 (Sumter County v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sumter County v. Brown, 102 So. 2d 303, 1958 Fla. App. LEXIS 2813 (Fla. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

SHANNON, Judge.

This appeal is from a decree dismissing the amended complaint with prejudice. The appellant was the plaintiff in the court below and the appellees were the defendants.

The plaintiff filed an amended complaint seeking a temporary mandatory injunction requiring the defendants to remove all obstructions from what it alleged was a public road and also, in a final hearing sought a permanent injunction against the defendants. The defendants filed an answer and the plaintiff filed a special reply. The Chancellor, by his final decree, after the plaintiff’s evidence was in, dismissed the amended bill of complaint with prejudice. The plaintiff brought its appeal to this court.

In its amended complaint the plaintiff alleged that, among other things, there was now and there had been for many years a certain public road running from State Road No. 475 westerly to Alto and thence southerly to State Road No. 44 which, according to the amended complaint, had been in use by the public for over sixty-five years; that the said road had been maintained by Sumter County continuously and uninterruptedly for a period of over twenty years prior to June 18, 1956. The said road, being worked upon by servants and employees of the county, and was graded, filled in and otherwise maintained as such a county road using county equipment and labor for the traveling public in general for a period of more than thirty years. The amended complaint then alleges that on or about June 18, 1956, the defendants illegally and unlawfully caused certain obstructions in the form of fences, locked gates and other obstructions to be placed upon the said road as to completely block it. The defendants generally denied the allegations in the amended complaint and the plaintiff filed a special reply in which it sought to set out certain facts which would estop the defendants from denying that the said road was a public highway. The plaintiff then produced its evidence which consisted of the county surveyor, who put in evidence a plat of the road in question and who testified that three miles of the road had been clayed and numerous fills, one fill was approximately one-half mile in length, and most of the fills had crossed drainpipes under them. In addition to the county engineer, there were numerous other witnesses from which it could be readily ascertained that the road had been used for a period of over forty-seven years. One witness testified to having traveled the road since 1913 or 1914 and having worked on it as an employee of Sumter County around 1915 or 1916. Another witness testified that he had traveled the road for 20, 25 or 30 years. One witness testified that he had traveled over the road since before 1909 and that he was a road overseer under several county supervisors and that he had worked this road filling up holes, cutting roots, building fills and rebuilding the bridge at Mill Creek and, as an employee of the county, he had kept the road open for public travel. Another witness testified that he had some thirty or thirty-five years ago worked for the county on this road cutting out roots, moving logs and filling up holes and that the road was being used as a public road at that time. We have given an example of the testimony of several witnesses for the plaintiff that that road was in use, and being maintained by the county well over twenty years. One witness testified that he had, in 1952 and 1955, hauled sand and clay for the road and another witness testified [305]*305that he had, as a county employee, worked on the road from 1946 to 1948. There is no question that the road was a public one for a period of over twenty years until the defendants placed the obstructions on the highway and also, there is no question of non-user of the road.

The Chancellor below apparently had the view that the use of it by the public, as well as by the county in its upkeep, was a permissive one and, in view of the fact that the road ran through wild and unimproved land, the plaintiff’s use of the same was merely permissive and not adverse. The evidence of the defendants may show it to be permissive but, the evidence already taken, points up the fact that the county was using the road adversely to the defendants.

We have stated some of the facts herein, and while a few we have cited occurred within some two or three years of the erection of obstructions, we have cited them simply to show that the county was still using the roadway. The various acts which show that the plaintiff-county was using the road adversely to the defendants were abundantly testified to by the various witnesses and such things consisted of grading, filling, claying, construction and maintenance of fences, signs where the fences had been were testified to by witnesses, together with use by a school bus. For none of these things was permission sought. There is a complete absence from the record of anything tending to show that the county was using the roadway under a permissive use.

Regardless of whether such right as the county has was based on prescription or was adverse, the facts in themselves, together with the allegations in its complaint, show adverse possession so as to bring the case out of the doctrine that the presumption that the use of the highway was permissive. We find that the rule is quite clear in Zetrouer v. Zetrouer, 1925, 89 Fla. 253, 103 So. 625, 626, where it is said:

“(3) The question then recurs whether the road had a legal existence at the time it was obstructed by defendant. The affidavits amply support the claim of continuous, uninterrupted use of the road by complainant and the public for more than 35 years. Where the common law obtains, 20 years’ continuous and uninterrupted use has always created a prescriptive right as well in the public as private individuals. Such a right once obtained is valid and may be enjoyed to the same extent as if a grant existed, it being the legal intendment that its use was originally founded upon such a right. Town of Lewiston v. Proctor, 27 Ill. 414; City of Chippewa Falls v. Hopkins, 109 Wis. 611, 85 N.W. 553; 1 Elliott on Roads and Streets (3d Ed.) 218; Campton’s Petition, 41 N. H. 197; Prudden v. Lindsley, 29 N.J. Eq. 615; Commonwealth v. Cole, 26 Pa. 187.
“(4) Prescription is a mode of acquiring title to property by immemorial or long-continued enjoyment. It refers to personal usage restricted to the claimant and his ancestors or grantors. The original theory was that the right claimed must have been enjoyed beyond the period of the memory of man, which for a long time in England went back to the time of Richard I. To avoid the necessity of proving such long duration a custom arose of allowing a presumption of a grant on proof of usage for a long term of years, which is now regulated by statute in most states.
“(5) Section 1602, Revised General Statutes of Florida of 1920, provides that all roads established by law or by prescription shall be public roads and under the management of the board of county commissioners. By virtue of this statute our law recognizes prescriptive right, and, there being no other statute affecting the subject-matter, the common-law rule of 20 years continuous and uninterrupted use prevails in our state. 1 Elliott on Roads [306]*306and Streets (3d Ed.) pp. 218, 219. See Whitsides v. Green, 13 Utah 341, 44 P. 1032, 57 Am.St.Rep. 740, text 744, for exhaustive discussion of the subject of highways by user.
“In this view we are not unmindful of that expressed by some authorities to the effect that, as to highways, the doctrine of prescription has no application.

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Related

Sumter County v. Brown
123 So. 2d 263 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
102 So. 2d 303, 1958 Fla. App. LEXIS 2813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sumter-county-v-brown-fladistctapp-1958.