White v. McCroskey

8 S.E.2d 827, 122 W. Va. 261, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 45
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1940
Docket9006
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 8 S.E.2d 827 (White v. McCroskey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. McCroskey, 8 S.E.2d 827, 122 W. Va. 261, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 45 (W. Va. 1940).

Opinion

Kenna, Judge:

This chancery proceeding was brought by the complainants for the purpose of enjoining the defendants from obstructing the right of way of a road connected with the old Mason Road in Grant District, near Milton, in Cabell County. A rather complicated series of bills of complaint and *262 answers resulted in proof being taken, muniments of title and plats being introduced, the finality being that the circuit court granted a perpetual injunction, and this appeal was accorded upon petition of the defendants. The showing before the trial chancellor may be summarized as follows:

In 1907, C. R. Summers and wife conveyed to Stuart H. Bowman a strip of land thirty feet wide by eight hundred and seventy-two feet in length, admittedly then being used as a county road upon which the property of. the plaintiffs abutted. This strip, herein referred to as “old road” to distinguish it from the “old Mason Road”, began where the old Mason Road crossed Mowerys Branch, and followed that branch on the south side west until the branch flowed into Johns Creek, and then followed Johns Creek in a general southwesterly direction, crossing the creek at a distance of approximately three hundred and sixty-one feet from the mouth of Mowerys Branch, and from there following the same straight course until it reached Summers Avenue in the Edgewood Addition to the Town of Milton. At that time, the land conveyed was being used as a public road connected with the old Mason Road at the point where the latter crossed Mowerys Branch, and when originally laid out its entire length passed through the property of C. R. Summers.

In 1929, W. A. Holley acquired from Fannie Summers, the devisee of C. R. Summers, a large lot shaped as an oblong parallelogram, the northeast corner of which was'located where the southern line of the old road connected with the western line of the old Mason Road, the boundary running from there westward with the south line of the old road and continuing its course a distance of approximately fifty-five feet beyond the point where the old road turned south until it almost reached Johns Creek. From the latter corner, the line ran south by east parallel with the line of the old Mason Road a distance of one hundred forty feet, and from that point parallel with the first line a distance of three hundred fifteen feet until the west line of the old Mason Road was reached, and from that corner *263 along the west line of the old Mason Road to the beginning. The northern line of this lot extended along the old Bowman roadway, and the western line deviated very slightly from the old road’s eastern line, Mowerys Branch and Johns Creek having a bend from the mouth of Mow-erys Branch to the south and around the northwest corner of the Holley lot.

Subsequent to 1930, the State Road Commission located a new right of way from the point where Mowerys Branch crossed the old Mason Road near the northeast corner of the Holley lot and extending from there southwest diagonally through the Holley lot to its southwest corner, extending beyond its southwest corner in the same general direction from that point and following the old road until it- reached the old road’s western terminus at Summers Avenue in the Edgewood Addition. The new right of way cut the Holley lot into two triangular lots of approximately equal size.

' W. A. Holley conveyed the triangular shaped lot lying northwest of the new right of way to the defendant, Viola McCroskey, so that her land is bounded on the southeast by what is called the new Mason Road, on the north by the old road and on the west by the old road with some slight deviation.

The property of the plaintiffs abuts upon the new right of way and upon the old Mason road. Mowerys Branch and Johns Creek lie between their property and the old right of way from the old Mason Road to the point where Johns Creek crosses the new Mason Road. The old roadr right of way separates that part of the Holley lot acquired by the defendant, Viola McCroskey, from both Mowerys Branch and Johns Creek.

On December 26, 1934, the State Road Commissioner, based upon the recommendation of his chief engineer, entered an order discontinuing the use of the old right of way with the exception of that part of it which fell within the boundary of the new Mason Road. The effect of that order and the question of whether the plaintiffs, notwithstanding that effect, have a vested right to the use of the *264 old road so that they may maintain an injunction forbidding its obstruction is the sole question raised by the record in this proceeding. . Plaintiffs, apparently, have no reversionary interest in the old right of way which would entitle them to the relief sought, but claim only that the old right of way was dedicated to public use and, as abutting property owners, they acquired an interest which was disregarded by the Road Commissioner when his order of discontinuance was entered. W. A. Holley, who then owned the property now owned by the defendant, Viola McCroskey, testified that he procured the entry of the Road Commissioner’s order.

The law of this state governing public highways has always been mainly statutory, concerning first the power of the county courts and now the power of the State Road Commissioner. The burden rests upon the person who seeks to establish the discontinuance or abandonment of a recognized public highway, the presumption favoring its continuance. Keystone Bridge Co. v. Summers et al., 13 W. Va. 476, 508; Lazzelle v. Garlow, 44 W. Va. 466, 482, 30 S. E. 171; County Court v. Hopkins, 80 W. Va. 393, 92 S. E. 662. Under former statutes, county roads could be altered and the prior location discontinued in two different ways: by an affirmative action of the county court, upon petition or without petition, when the interest of the people of the county required it, and also by the action of the county surveyor with the consent- of the owner of the land over which the road formerly ran. No notice was required in the beginning, but was later. Dudding v. White, 82 W. Va. 542, 546, 96 S. E. 942. When the Dudding case was decided, the statute further provided that when a county road was altered, the former road should be discontinued to the extent of the alteration and no further. No affirmative action to bring about the discontinuance of the old road was required, but that was an automatic result of the alteration of the former road.

When the control of our county roads was transferred from the county courts to the State Road Commission, there was a complete revision of our statutory road law, *265 and the provision governing a discontinuance of an abandoned road when the location of the road was altered was not reenacted, and was therefore repealed. In its stead, sub-section two of Michie’s Code, 17-4-4, vesting in the State Road Commissioner power to “upon petition and hearing, or after due investigation, upon his own initiative, discontinue any road no longer necessary;” was enacted. It was' under the latter provision that the order of the State Road Commissioner discontinuing the old road was entered in the case before us.

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.E.2d 827, 122 W. Va. 261, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-mccroskey-wva-1940.