Mulch v. Nagle
Mulch v. Nagle
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal taken by the defendants from a judgment decreeing that a public highway extends along a certain twelve-foot strip of land located along the easterly boundary of two lots of land owned by the defendants, whose ownership of said lots was adjudged to be subservient to the rights of the public to use said strip of land as a public highway, and enjoining the defendants from erecting or maintaining any obstruction upon said strip of land in such manner as to interfere with the free use thereof as a highway by the public or by plaintiff as a part thereof.
In response to the issues raised by the pleadings the court found substantially to the effect that a public highway twelve feet wide extended along the easterly line of lots 130 and 131 of the San Martin ranch, in Santa Clara County *561 (which for convenience will be referred to as the Nagle property), from Church Avenue in a southerly direction 36.60i:L/2 chains to Las Llagas Creek; that the plaintiff is the owner of a small tract of land facing and bordering on said highway.
Findings numbered IV, V, and VI appear as follows:
“IV. That the said highway has constantly and continuously for a period extending over fifteen years, been used and traveled on foot, in vehicles and otherwise, and kept in repair by the plaintiff herein, his predecessors in interest in the land above described, and by the general public under claim of right, with the knowledge and consent of, and without any objection or hindrance by the owners of said lots 130 and 131 of the San Martin ranch during all of said time, except as hereinafter in these findings set forth.
“V. That ever since the year 1898, the said strip of land above described as a highway has been continuously, openly and under claim of right adverse to defendants been traveled on foot, in vehicles and otherwise by the plaintiff herein, his predecessors in interest and by such portion of the general public as had occasion to use the same. That during all of said time there was a well-defined and marked roadway thereon and that the same was kept in repair and repaired at various times by the general public; that during all of said time no permission was asked or granted for the use of-said strip of land as a highway, or was any objection made by the owners of said lots 130 and 131 or those in charge thereof to the use of said strip of land as said highway, or any obstruction placed thereon, except as hereinafter stated.
“VI. That on or about the thirty-first day of January, 1916, the defendants unlawfully and without right so to do, obstructed the said mentioned highway so that it could not be traveled, by placing a gate across the same at a point where said road connects with said Church Avenue, without plaintiff’s knowledge or consent and do now threaten and intend to maintain said gate and prevent plaintiff, his agents and employees, and the public from nsing; said road, highway or right of way, and will continue so to do unless restrained by this honorable court.”
*562 Thence follow other findings of fact to the effect that the obstruction of said road is specially injurious to plaintiff; that if the defendants are not restrained from obstructing said highway the plaintiff’s and the public’s use thereof will be prevented and that the ownership of said lots 130 and 131 is subject to and subservient to the use of said strip as a public highway.
The record shows that Santa Clara Land Company acquired title to the lots upon which said disputed road is located on December 14, 1900, and on April 22, 1902, conveyed the property to D. Guillermo Stein, who in turn conveyed it to Anna B. Glover on November 21, 1911. Glover conveyed to one Olds in July, 1913, and the Olds’ ownership passed to one O’Donnell in April of 1915, who in turn conveyed to Caroline Nagle, one of the defendants herein, on July 29, 1915.
Ellis W. Harrison, a witness called on behalf of the plaintiff, testified substantially to the effect that in 1898 he bought the property now owned by the defendant Caroline Nagle bn a contract, but that he never became the owner thereof; that while he was in possession of the Nagle tract he entered into an arrangement with two neighbors who owned property south of Las Llagas Creek to extend a road from Church Avenue, which marks the northerly end of the disputed strip of land, to Lena Avenue; that he continued in the possession of the Nagle property for about two years;' that the strip of land in controversy here was opened as a road in 1898 and the public were *563 allowed to go through; that no objection was ever raised to his knowledge to the opening of the road, and that it was maintained as a public road as soon as it was opened, and traveled continuously; that it was maintained and kept up and repaired by the people living in that neighborhood; that neighbors living to the south of the property desired a way to reach Church Avenue lying north of the Nagle property, and that he wanted a convenient exit from his property to the south, and that the road thus opened would also be convenient for the accommodation of one Whitney, who then owned and occupied the property now belonging to the plaintiff.
Benjamin Fuller testified that he was familiar with the disputed highway from 1900 to 1907, and that from 1902 to 1907 he was roadmaster of the particular district within which the disputed highway was situate, and had never heard anyone question the right of the public or anyone to travel the road in question;, that it was well defined and a hard well-traveled road, kept in repair by neighbors, and that he had personally gone over the road and repaired it; that where it crossed Las Llagas Creek it was accustomed to be washed out every year during winter, and as roadmaster of the district he fixed the crossing and kept it in repair; that Mr. Whitney (predecessor in interest of plaintiff) used the road every day. He testified further that when the Nagle place was set out to vines in 1904 or 1905, the roadway was not interfered’ with in any way, at which time the Nagle property was in charge of a Mr. Cook and a Mr. Caselano; that no objection was ever made by any person in charge of the place to the maintenance of the road; that he had been with the superintendent of the property during Stein’s ownership at the time certain repairs were made on the road, but no objection was made because of such repair work. During all the time the witness was there, with the, exception of when the washouts occurred, there was an attempt made to keep a road absolutely open and clear at that place, being maintained as such and traveled by the general public. The highway was generally known in the neighborhood as Murphy Avenue.
Enos Bechis testified that he acted as superintendent of the Nagle property and at a time when the title to said property was vested in Stein, for a period of five or six *564 years, beginning in 1906 or 1907; that he did not know of any objection having been made by the company he directly acted for, or the people they represented (referring presumably to Stein) relative to maintaining the driveway; that in his capacity as superintendent he raised no objection to the maintenance of the roadway and permission to use the same was never requested of him by anyone.
Charles Curtis testified that he had been familiar with the roadway in dispute since 1897 and that the only time that he had known it to be closed was when the obstruction complained! of by plaintiff was placed on the road by the defendants; that from the time he had first known the road it had been traveled as such, open to all who had occasion to use it; that he had hauled gravel on it to repair it while Mr. Fuller was roadmaster and that he knew of neighbors doing the same.
C. E. Wendell testified that he lived in the neighborhood ■ of the strip of land in dispute and he knew that for sixteen or eighteen years it had been “used generally by the public with wagons hauling produce, delivery wagons, and everything of that character passing over it and anybody that wanted to go by. I never heard at any time of any objection made to its use as a road. So far as I ever heard it was generally considered in the neighborhood as an open road.”
W. E. Sohlke testified that he lived in the vicinity of the roadway in dispute and that he had known it since the winter of 1913, since which time it had been kept open and maintained as a roadway over which he occasionally traveled and that there had never been any' question of hindrance raised as to his traveling it.
M. E. Mulch testified that he was the son of the plaintiff and had been acquainted with the road in dispute for eleven years and that it had never been closed until the obstruction referred to in the complaint was placed thereon; that no one had ever questioned his right to travel this road nor did he ever ask anyone for permission so to do; that it was a first-class roadway and had never been plowed up; that the plaintiff used the road every day in the year to get mail, haul fruit and produce to town, and for other purposes; that a great deal of travel passes over the road; that the roadway in dispute connects with other neighborhood *565 avenues and that the plaintiff has no other roadway that is suitable for the ingress and egress of the plaintiff.
The plaintiff testified that he acquired the property occupied by him and fronting on the strip of land in question from one Whitney in 1905 and that at the time he moved on the property Whitney stated that the said strip of land was his road; that plaintiff had used the road thereafter without objection or hindrance until the Nagles had objected to his using it; that the successors in interest of Stein had seen plaintiff use the disputed road; that during ‘ the time the Nagle property was in the ownership of Stein it was in charge first of one Casalano and later of Bechis, who knew that plaintiff was using the road and who did not object to such use and that plaintiff had never asked anyone’s permission to use the road.
The foregoing abstract of testimony discloses ample evidence upon which to rest the findings of the court. While it is true that the record does disclose some evidence tending in a weak manner to contradict the testimony thus set out, yet we are well satisfied with the conclusions reached by the trial court that there has been a valid dedication of the strip of land for highway purposes, and that the interference with the plaintiff’s use of said road was unwarranted.
It is very earnestly contended by the appellants that the record fails to disclose any evidence which warranted the court in finding that the adverse use of the strip of land in question had been with the knowledge and consent of the owners of the fee thereof. This objection is predicated upon the claim that it was not shown that during the ownership of the Nagle property by Stein he had any knowledge of the adverse use thereof, either by plaintiff or the public. It appears from the record that during the period of time that Stein was the owner of the property referred to he was absent from the state of California and domiciled in Guatemala. It was not affirmatively shown that he had seen the property before he became the owner of it, nor was it shown that any hostile use of the strip of land had ever been actually brought to his knowledge.
We are in agreement with the suggestion of counsel for the appellants that the act of Harrison in first opening the traveled highway could not of itself, under any view of the case, amount to a dedication of the strip of land for public highway purposes, for the reason that he was not then or thereafter the owner of the property. (13 R. C. L. 23.)
Finding numbered VII was drawn in order to show that the obstruction complained of by plaintiff to the travel of the highway in question was such as to constitute it a public nuisance and thus to permit the plaintiff to maintain *568 his action under the provisions of section 3493 of the Civil Code. We find it to he sufficiently supported in its essential elements by the evidence.
It is our view that the findings, based, as we have found them to be, upon ample evidence, are • entirely sufficient to establish a public highway by implied dedication. (Schwerdtle v. Comity of Placer, 108 Cal. 589, [41 Pac. 448]; Hartley v. Vermilion, 141 Cal. 339, [74 Pac. 987]; People v. Myring, 144 Cal. 351, [77 Pac. 975]; Fleming v. Howard, 150 Cal. 28, [87 Pac. 908]; Leverone v. Weakley, 155 Cal. 395, [101 Pac. 304] ; City of Venice v. Short Line Beach Land Co., 180 Cal. 447, [181 Pac. 658].)
The judgment is affirmed.
Kerrigan, J., and Richards, J., concurred. -
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on April 26, 1921.
All the Justices concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- J. W. MULCH, Respondent, v. CAROLINE NAGLE Et Al., Appellants
- Cited By
- 12 cases
- Status
- Published