Commonwealth v. Jackson
Commonwealth v. Jackson
Opinion of the Court
Opinion bt
“ It has been settled, if anything can be, that a road once laid
Nor can we see error in the charge of the court. It was plainly
The answers to the requests of the commonwealth for instructions are also without error. The court is not to be blamed for failing to understand the first, and the second and the answer thereto practically raised the entire issue in the case. The request was “ that, if the jury believe that the defendant placed his fence on or in part of the public road leading from the northwest corner of Sadsbury township to public road known as plank road — the road in question in this case — laid out and confirmed by the court, he would be guilty as indicted,” and the answer, “ This point is refused. It is the road as actually opened on the ground that is to be obstructed and not the one laid out on paper by the court.” The various specifications of error in some form spring from this one question and, inasmuch as it has been clearly settled by an unvarying series of decisions from the beginning of the administration of our present road law in 1836 down to the present time, from Holden v. Cole, supra, to Com. v. Dicken, 145 Pa. 453, there is scarcely room for contention in regard to it.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Commonwealth v. William W. Jackson
- Cited By
- 7 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Criminal law — Obstructing road — Fences—Road law — How boundaries determined. The question whether a fence is maintained within the limits of a public road is a question of fact for the jury and depends upon the location of the defendant’s fence with reference to the road as actually opened by the supervisors; offers of evidence by the commonwealth to show that the fence as erected by defendant was within the limits of the road as laid out by the viewers are inadmissible. The defendant is guilty only if he maintains his fence within twenty feet from the center of the generally traveled track as it was originally opened and not as laid out on paper by the court.