Wasmund v. Harm

78 P. 777, 36 Wash. 170, 1904 Wash. LEXIS 538
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1904
DocketNo. 4863
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 78 P. 777 (Wasmund v. Harm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wasmund v. Harm, 78 P. 777, 36 Wash. 170, 1904 Wash. LEXIS 538 (Wash. 1904).

Opinion

Fullerton, C. J. —

On July 2, 1878, the Northern Pacific Railway Company, being then the owner of a part of the southeast quarter of section 1, in township 19, north, of range 4, east of the Williamette Meridian, conveyed the same to one Isaac W. Anderson, .reserving to itself a strip 400 feet wide extending northerly through the same near the center thereof, being a strip 200 feet in width on each side of its railway track. In December, 1881, Anderson conveyed, by warranty deed and without reservation of any kind, all the land lying on the east side of the railroad to the appellant Carl Wasmund, and on September 28, 1882, conveyed the part on the west side of the track to one T. J. Green. Green, in January, 1885, conveyed some 25 acres off the north end of the tract to one G. W. Holt, and in January, 1887, conveyed the remainder to the respondent, Chris Harm. Holt in February, 1888, conveyed the tract deeded to him. to one James A. Johnson, who, on the 27th of December, 1889, conveyed the same to Harm.

By these conveyances the respondents, as a community, became the owners of all the original tract owned by Anderson which lay west of the railroad. At the time of these several conveyances, the only county road accessible to any part of the land was one crossing the railway track some distance south of the south, boundary of section 1, and extending in a northeasterly direction, crossing the same at or near its southeast corner. It will be seen, therefore, that, when Anderson conveyed the tract lying east of the railroad to the appellants, it cut off the remainder from the road, leaving it landlocked in so far as access to the public highways was concerned. Anderson, while he continued to own the isolated tract, seems to have gained access thereto from the road by passing through the orchard and meadow1 of the appellants; and [174]*174Green, while he owned it, gained access thereto in the same way. Holt, after his purchase, opened up, by permission of the appellants, an old-logging road, which extended from a point on the county road near the southeast comer of section 1, westerly across the appellants’ land to the railroad, and used this way during the time he continued to hold the 25 acres he purchased from Green. Johnson used the same way after he purchased from Holt, paying the appellants a small consideration for the privilege.

The respondents settled upon the tract purchased by them from Anderson in 1887. They found the road that Holt had opened still in use, and the only means of reaching the public highway from the lands they had recently purchased. They immediately began the use of the road, and, from thence to the time of the commencement of this action in December, 1902, used it continuously. The appellants’ land across which it ran was then uninclosed. It remained so until about the year 1895, when the appellants, being desirous of fencing it, asked the respondents to insert posts on the side of the road where they wished to have their gates. These posts were put in by the respondents at once. Later, when the appellants informed them that they had completed the fence, they put in gates, which they have continued to maintain ever since. There was, however, no interruption of their use of the way during any of the times mentioned.

In December, 1902, the appellants served notice upon the respondent purporting to revoke any license they might have to use the way, and forbidding them to make further use of the same in any manner. The respondents, nevertheless, continued in their use of the way, whereupon this action was brought to restrain them from so doing. To the complaint for an injunction, the respondents answered, justifying their use of the way on two [175]*175grounds: first, that they were entitled to its use as a way of necessity; and, second, that they had a right of way by reason of an adverse user of the same for over ten years. On the trial the court found against the claim of a right of way of necessity, but held that the respondents had a right of way by adverse user. Judgment was entered in accordance with the finding, and this appeal is taken therefrom.

The principle question, and the only one we have found it necessary to discuss, is, have the respondents acquired a right to a way by adverse user across the appellants’ premises? The appellants contend they have not, for several reasons, the first of which is that, conceding the user to have been adverse and otherwise sufficient to ripen into an easement in time, the use has not been continued for the required period. They argue that, inasmuch as there is no special statute of limitations in this state applicable to incorporeal hereditaments, the rule of the common law must be applied, and that this rule fixed the period at twenty years. But we think counsel are mistaken in assuming that the prescriptive period under the common law was twenty years. Strictly speaking, it was not. Under the common law, to acquire an easement in the land of another by adverse user, the use must have continued from a time when the memory of man ran not to the contrary, and it was only by analogy to the statute of 21 Jac. 1, ch. 16, requiring writs for the recovery of real property to be “sued out within twenty years next after the title and cause of action had first descended or fallen,” that the English courts held that twenty years’ use and enjoyment of an easement was sufficient evidence of the possession of a prescriptive right. Later on the matter was regulated in England by statute. In the United States, however, the courts have generally fol[176]*176lowed the doctrine of the English courts, rather than the rule of the common law; and it is now the prevailing rule that the prescriptive period for the acquisition of an easement corresponds with the local period of limitations for quieting title to lands. Washburn’s Easements and Servitudes (4th ed.), p. 148, par. 24; Angelí on Limitations, §4, Note 2; 22 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d ed.), 1212. “In general, it is the policy of the courts of law to limit the presumption of grants to periods analogous to those of the statute of limitations, in cases where the statute does not apply.” Ricard v. Williams, 7 Wheat. 110. This rule seems consonant with the better reason, and we feel constrained to follow it Applying it to the case before us, it is at once apparent that the way in question here has been in use by the respondents for the full statutory period, the same having been in use by the respondents from about the middle of the year 1887 to the end of the year 1902.

In this connection it is well to notice the further contention of the appellants that the respondents are estopped from claiming that adverse use for any number of years less than twenty will establish a way by prescription, because of the manner in which the issue was framed in the pleadings. The respondents, in answer to the appellants’ complaint, claimed a right of way by prescription, alleging that they had used the way in question for a period of twenty years. These allegations were denied in the reply. The argument is that a litigant is bound by the theory of his pleadings, and cannot recover, even if his proofs may warrant a recovery, if such proofs do not correspond with such theory. But the rule is not so onerous as this. Mistakes in pleadings may always be amended to correspond with the proofs, and an appellate court will never deny a litigant the benefit of his proofs because of a [177]*177variance between them and the allegations of his pleadings, unless, perhaps, in a case where he has been called upon to amend, and has refused.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 P. 777, 36 Wash. 170, 1904 Wash. LEXIS 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wasmund-v-harm-wash-1904.