Thomas v. Vanderslice
This text of 77 So. 367 (Thomas v. Vanderslice) 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.
Opinion
The suit is by bill in equity, and seeks to compel respondents (appellees here) to remove a gate from across a lane 20 feet wide, which is between the lot of complainant and the property of respondents. The fee to the lane is in the respondents, but complainant has acquired a right of way along, over, and across such lane. This right he acquired by conveyance from one Mrs. Foster, who once owned all the land on both sides of the lane or alley as well as the exclusive right to the use and control of such way. In 1905 she sold to complainant a lot of one acre, lying on the north side of the lane or alley, and bordering the same for a distance of four chains and four links, about 266 feet. His grant, as to tbe use of the lane, is as follows:
“Grantor herein also conveys the perpetual right of use in, to, out of, over, along and across the said 20-foot lane above referred to in this deed of conveyance.”
The gate which it is sought to have the respondents remove from across the lane was there when complainant acquired his lot aDd the right of way in the lane. It was not then, by the parties owning the lane, considered an obstruction of the lane; and it seems never to have been treated as an obstruction, but as a proper accessory to the use of the lane or alley, in connection with the two premises for the use of which it was intended. It is shown that the gate has never been used as an obstruction of tbe lane, against the use of it by complainant or by any other person desiring to use it. It was intended to prevent the use of the way by the public, and to prevent stock or animals from running through the lane and trespassing upon the property of the owners. It also appears that there was another gate across the lane when complainant acquired his property and for a brief time thereafter, and that both gates, when in use, were not then treated or considered as unwarranted or unlawful obstructions of the lane. One gate was allow *74 ed to decay and become unfit for use, and was simply not replaced by complainant or respondents.
As we have before said, the ease is.distinguished from cases as for the obstruction of a public way, or of a private one in violation of the rights of the owners or of those who have acquired the right to so use it. The case made by this record is that the way is private, and that complainant now has the same unobstructed use thereof which he has ever had, and which he contracted for, and that no one a party to this record has ever denied, or now denies, his right to such use.,
It follows that there is no equity in the bill, and that the trial court properly dismissed the bill.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
77 So. 367, 201 Ala. 73, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-vanderslice-ala-1917.