Tarpey v. Veith

134 P. 367, 22 Cal. App. 289, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 19
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 11, 1913
DocketCiv. No. 1259.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 134 P. 367 (Tarpey v. Veith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tarpey v. Veith, 134 P. 367, 22 Cal. App. 289, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 19 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

This action was instituted for the purpose of preventing by injunction the defendant’s threatened continuing trespass upon the lands of the plaintiff. The defendant in his original answer denied that he had trespassed upon the lands of plaintiff, or that he had threatened to commit a continuing trespass or any trespass upon such lands; and as a special defense to the action pleaded that the strip of land in controversy was a public highway free and open to the use of the defendant and the public in general..

In accordance with the issue thus raised the case was tried upon the theory that such strip of land became a public highway by the presumptive dedication of the plaintiff and the implied acceptance of the public.

After the submission of the cause but before a decision thereon was rendered the defendant requested permission to amend his answer “so that the allegations and denials thereof may correspond with the proofs.” This request, upon due notice to the plaintiff of its making, was granted by the lower court. Thereupon the defendant filed an amended answer, which admitted the plaintiff’s ownership of the land; admitted that the defendant had, as was charged in the complaint, entered upon said land and broken down, destroyed, and removed certain f ences or barriers erected and maintained by plaintiff, and that he, the defendant, proposed to continue to break down, destroy, and remove any fence or barrier as often as plaintiff erected or repaired the same, for the reason, as was in effect alleged, that the defendant had acquired by adverse user and under a communicated claim of right a prescriptive right of way over the disputed strip of land.

Plaintiff’s case in chief was rested upon proof of his ownership and possession of the land in question, and evidence of the actual and threatened continuing trespass of the defendant. The defendant’s case rested largely, if not entirely, upon evidence which tended to show that the disputed strip of land had been for more than five years preceding the commencement of the action used by the defendant and the farmers and fruit-growers of the vicinity for the purpose of *291 hauling fruit and farm products to “Tarpey Switch,” and ■that plaintiff never at any time objected to such user.

In rebuttal the plaintiff showed that in planting to vines the quarter section of land along and across which the disputed strip of land runs, he left avenues similar to the disputed strip on all four sides of said quarter section for use as “turning out rows”; that similar avenues were constructed across the said quarter section north, south, east, and west; that plaintiff permitted certain persons, including the defendant, to use the disputed strip of land without any intention to dedicate it to the public for use as a highway; that plaintiff had instructed his foreman to allow the neighbors in the immediate vicinity, including the defendant, to use the disputed strip for hauling so long as they did not abuse the privilege ; that plaintiff at all times maintained signs on the avenues crossing his land, including the avenue or strip of land in controversy, designating them “private roads”; that plaintiff never had any knowledge that defendant or any other person was using the disputed strip of land adversely or under a claim of right; that plaintiff had frequently given permission to near-by neighbors to use a railroad siding known as Tarpey Switch, which at one time was inaccessible save by way of plaintiff’s lands; that permission to use this switch necessarily carried with it permission to use the disputed strip of land; that defendant’s predecessors in interest as owners of an adjoining quarter section of land had requested and were granted permission by plaintiff to use the Tarpey Switch; that upon one occasion plaintiff had refused such permission because he himself was using the switch.

The trial court’s findings of fact in effect covered and disposed of all the issues raised by the amended answer of the defendant, and found in favor of the plaintiff substantially in accord with the allegations of the complaint and the admissions of the amended answer. Among other things the findings of fact in effect declare that the defendant had not at any time used the strip of land in controversy, or traveled the same in vehicles or otherwise, adversely to the plaintiff or under any claim of right; but to the contrary that the user of said strip of land by the defendant and other persons was with the permission and by the sufferance of the plaintiff.

*292 No claim is made here that the evidence shows the disputed strip of land to be a public highway; and no fault is found with the findings upon the score that they are limited to the issue of a prescriptive right of way in the defendant. The principal point relied upon is that the evidence not only does not support the findings as made, but warrants and requires contrary findings to the effect that the defendant had acquired a right of way by prescription over the plaintiff’s lands. This contention is based upon the assumption that the evidence shows without dispute “that the defendant for more than five years used the road openly, notoriously, continuously and without objection with the full knowledge of the plaintiff.”

Conceding that the evidence shows all that is claimed by the defendant in this behalf, still this would not as a matter of law be sufficient to warrant and support a finding in favor of the defendant. A right of way by prescription may be acquired over the lands of another only by user which is neither expressly nor tacitly permissive. Such user must be for the full period of five years, not only open, notorious, and continuous,, but it must be adverse and under a communicated claim of right as well. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1007; Jones on Easements, sec. 267; Stewart v. Frink, 94 N. C. 487; [55 Am. Rep. 619]; Clarke v. Clarke, 133 Cal. 667; [66 Pac. 10].) That is to say, user alone is not sufficient to establish a prescriptive right of way over the lands of another. Such user must be accompanied by a claim of right communicated to the owner of the land; or it niust be shown that the user was so continuous and so openly and notoriously adverse to the owner as to create a presumptive knowledge in the owner that the person using the land was doing so under a claim of right. (Jones on Easements, sec. 266; Clarke v. Clarke, 133 Cal. 667, [66 Pac. 10].) In other words, in the absence of an actual claim of right, “the use must have been enjoyed under such circumstances as will indicate that it has been claimed as a right, and has not been regarded by the parties merely as a privilege revocable at the pleasure of the owner of the soil.” (Dexter v. Tree, 117 Ill. 532, [6 N. E. 506].) The rule in this behalf is stated in the case of Clarke v. Clarke, where, upon practically the same state of facts as is presented here, the supreme court said: “The *293 burden is upon the party who claims title by prescription to clearly prove by competent evidence all the elements essential to such title. The user must have been adverse to the true owner and hostile to his title. It must have been actual, continued and open, and under a claim of right.

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Bluebook (online)
134 P. 367, 22 Cal. App. 289, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tarpey-v-veith-calctapp-1913.