Nally v. Maley
Nally v. Maley
Opinion of the Court
Action for trespass upon real property. The allegations of the complaint are that plaintiff was the owner of a quarter section, and that defendant unlawfully entered upon it with a team and wagon to plaintiff’s damage one dollar. The answer was that the locus in quo was a public highway.
It was conceded on the trial, and the court so instructed the jury, that there was a public highway across plaintiff’s land, the only controversy being whether the locus of the alleged trespass was within or without its boundaries.
The only question that we find it necessary to consider is whether there was evidence sufficient to justify the jury in finding that a highway had been laid out according to the statute. As the court said to the jury, there were practically no records in existence showing the laying out of a highway or its location. An attempt was made to prove it by secondary evidence, it being claimed that the records had been lost. An examination of the record satisfies us that the evidence was wholly insufficient to prove the laying out of a highway under the statute, or, if laid out, that it included the locus of the alleged trespass. Most of the evidence that was introduced had reference to the attempt to lay out a road in 1867; but this was of no materiality, because, as we understand it, it is not claimed that the road then .attempted to be laid out included the place of the trespass. The claim is that this was effected by a change of location made in 1868. But as to what was done to effect this change, or 'how or where it altered the original road, the evidence is of altogether too indefinite and uncertain a character upon which to base any conclusion.
An attempt is made to sustain the proceedings on the ground that the then owner of the land accepted the damages awarded him, and that, therefore, he and those in privity with him are estopped from asserting that the road was not lawfully laid out. The evidence that the owner ever did accept damages, and, if so, for what, is wholly insufficient.
The damages claimed are merely nominal; and we fail to see that the result of the litigation will have much, if any, tendency to settle definitely the only question of any sort of importance, to wit, the location and boundaries of this highway. It is therefore with regret that we feel compelled to reverse.
Order reversed, and new trial granted, but without statutory costs to plaintiff.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JOHANNA NALLY v. JOHN MALEY
- Status
- Published