Wilson v. Waters

64 A.2d 135, 192 Md. 221, 1949 Md. LEXIS 229
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 9, 1949
Docket[No. 73, October Term, 1948.]
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 64 A.2d 135 (Wilson v. Waters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Waters, 64 A.2d 135, 192 Md. 221, 1949 Md. LEXIS 229 (Md. 1949).

Opinion

Delaplaine, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The record in this case contains three appeals taken by Elsie Wilson from three judgments entered against *225 her in the Circuit Court for Howard County. The judgments were recovered by plaintiffs in three suits for damages for barricading a road over her land from plaintiffs’ four houses to Cissell Avenue in the village of North Laurel.

Plaintiffs houses were built more than 75 years ago and are commonly known as “Four Block.” They are located on lot 42, which has a frontage of 50 feet on Cissell Avenue and a depth of 150 feet, as shown on the plat of the village. Thomas M. Waters and wife own the northern house and also the adjoining house in which they live. Joseph M. Burley, Jr., and wife own and occupy the third house. The southern house is owned by Joseph, Kenneth and Samuel Burley, sons of Joseph M. Burley, Sr., who died in 1937. Defendant owns lot 43, situated south of lot 42.

Plaintiffs alleged in the three suits that for more than twenty years they had used the road along the northern line of defendant’s land as a means of access to the rear of their houses, but on April 15, 1946, defendant erected a fence along the northern line, and also a gate across the road at the intersection of Cissell Avenue, and locked the gate, and subsequently removed the gate and extended the fence across the road, thereby depriving them of its use. The three suits were consolidated and tried together. After the trial court denied defendant’s motions for directed verdicts, the jury awarded a verdict in favor of plaintiffs for the sum of $5 in each case.

Plaintiffs did not claim an easement in the land by grant. They claimed a right of way by prescription. It has always been the law in Maryland that no person who has a right of entry into any land shall enter there-into but within twenty years after his right of entry accrued. This rule was embodied in the Statute of 21 James I, ch. 16 enacted by Parliament in 1623. 2 Alexander’s British Statutes, Coe’s Ed., 599. It is now in force in Maryland by virtue of Article 5 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights, which proclaims that the inhabitants of Maryland are entitled to the Common Láw of England and *226 also to the benefit of such of the English statutes as existed on July 4, 1776, and which “have been found applicable to their local and other circumstances, and have been introduced, used and practiced by the Courts of Law or Equity.” Safe Deposit & Trust Co. of Baltimore v. Marburg, 110 Md. 410, 414, 72 A. 839. But it is well settled that adverse possession sufficient to give marketable title to land must be open and notorious, continuous and exclusive. Gittings v. Moale, 21 Md. 135, 148; Peper v. Traeger, 152 Md. 174, 181, 136 A. 537.

While the Statute of Limitations does not apply to adverse user of another’s land by mere enjoyment of an easement, nevertheless the statute applicable' to reentry into land has been made applicable by analogy to incorporeal rights. It is well established that to acquire an easement by prescription, the claimant must prove adverse, exclusive and continuous use for twenty years. Waters v. Snouffer, 88 Md. 391, 41 A. 785; Smith v. Shiebeck, 180 Md. 412, 419, 24 A. 2d 795; Condry v. Laurie, 184 Md. 317, 41 A. 2d 66; Punte v. Taylor, 189 Md. 102, 111, 53 A. 2d 773, 777. We recognize, however, that while adverse possession, sufficient to establish title in fee simple, must be absolutely exclusive, the user essential for establishing an easement is exclusive in the limited sense that the claimant’s right must not depend for its enjoyment upon a similar right in others, and, though claimant may not have been the only one who. used it, he used it under a claim of right independently of all others. Cox v. Forrest, 60 Md. 74, 80; 4 Tiffany, Real Property, 3d Ed., sec. 1199.

In this case the testimony concerning the location and width of the road, which plaintiffs swore positively they had used more than twenty years, was sufficiently definite to warrant submission of the case to the jury. Waters, age 74, testified that the road was there when he moved to “Four Block” 35 years ago, and that he had uséd it continuously until it was barricaded by defendant. Kenneth Burley, age 44, testified that there had been a dirt road there ever since he was “big enough to know.’! He *227 swore that he had used it ever since 1926, when he bought his first automobile. Elmer F. Warner, who had driven over the road to deliver feed, paint and other supplies from a store in Laurel, testified that the road was there when he started to school more than a quarter of a century ago. He described the road as a country lane between 18 and 20 feet wide.

Defendant’s main contention is that there was no legally sufficient evidence that plaintiffs’ use of the road was exclusive. She claims that when she bought her lot in 1934, it was unenclosed and unimproved, and that there was no road on the lot until one was made for hauling building materials when she built her house; and that any use of the road by plaintiffs was merely in connection with permissive use by the general public. It may be stated as a general rule that when a person has used a roadway over the land of another openly and continuously and without objection for twenty years, it will be presumed that the use has been adverse under a claim of right, unless it appears to have been by permission. To prevent a prescriptive easement from arising from such use, the owner of the land has the burden of showing that the use of the way was by license inconsistent with a claim of right. Cox v. Forrest, 60 Md. 74, 80; Condry v. Laurie, 184 Md. 317, 41 A. 2d 66. On the other hand, where the land has been used by the general public by implied license, it will be presumed that the use of the land by a neighboring landowner was not adverse, but permissive, unless‘there was some distinct act indicating an exclusive use under a claim of right and distinguishable from the general use. Pirman v. Confer, 273 N. Y. 357, 7 N. E. 2d 262, 111 A. L. R. 216. In applying this rule in a Massachusetts case, Chief Justice Shaw said: “A regularly formed and wrought way across the ground, paved, macadamized, or graveled and fitted for use as a way, from his own estate to the highway, indicating a use distinct from any use to be made of it by the proprietors, would, in our opinion, be evidence of such exclusive use and claim of right.. So would be any plain, unequivocal *228 act, indicating a peculiar and exclusive claim, open and ostensible, and distinguishable from that of others.” Kilburn v. Adams, 7 Metc., Mass., 33, 39 Am. Dec. 754, 756.

It is true that some courts have ruled that the fact that land, over which a right of way is claimed, was “unenclosed” raises a presumption that the use was permissive. By that ruling, however, the courts have occasionally been misled to establish easements over vacant lots in urban districts, although the lots had been cleared and cared for. Thus it seems that the more appropriate term in such cases is “unimproved.”

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Bluebook (online)
64 A.2d 135, 192 Md. 221, 1949 Md. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-waters-md-1949.