Crocker v. Collins
Crocker v. Collins
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought for the purpose of enjoining the defendants from entering upon certain premises in the town of Beaufort, claimed by the plaintiff, and from pulling down, destroying, or otherwise injuring the buildings standing on said premises. By consent, the testimony was taken by a special master and reported to the court, and the case came on for hearing before his honor, Judge Norton. After the pleadings were read, the defendants interposed an oral demurrer, upon the ground that the facts stated in the complaint were not sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The demurrer was overruled, and the defendants excepted, giving oral notice of appeal. Thereupon the Circuit Judge stated that defendants were entitled to a stay, but the defendants, waiving this right, consented to proceed, and the case was heard upon the merits. Subsequently the judge rendered his decree, granting a perpetual injunction as prayed for, and defendants appealed as well from the order overruling their demurrer as from the final judgment granting the injunction.
To determine the question as to the demurrer, it will be necessary to consider the allegations of the complaint, which are substantially as follows: The plaintiff, complaining of the defendants above named, a municipal corporation created by the laws of this State, alleges:
1st. That on the 1st day of January, 1880, and for many years prior thereto, Martha A. Barnwell was seized and possessed of ‘ ‘all that certain lot or lots of land, situate in the town of Beaufort,” Sue., “and continued in adverse, quiet, and peaceable possession of the same” until the 4th of August, 1890, when she sold and conveyed the said premises to the
2d. That plaintiff and his grantors have been in adverse possession of said premises prior to and ever since the year 1867, the same having been enclosed by a fence during all that time; and during all that time no street or alley-way has been used or opened through said premises.
3d. That on the 1st of October, A. D. 1890, the defendant Collins was intendant, and the defendant Christensen and others (naming them) were wardens, and as such the said intendant and wardens constituted, and still are, the “Town Council of Beaufort.”
4th. That on the 18th of October, 1890, the plaintiff was erecting a dwelling house and other structures upon said premises, which work and the materials used cost him one hundred and fifty dollars.
5th. That on or about the 18th of October, 1890, John Oreen was marshal of the town of Beaufort, the agent and employee of the defendants, and as such did on that day, at the direction, and in accordance with the instructions, given to him by the defendants, enter upon said premises, and ordered the workmen employed by plaintiff in erecting said building to discontinue their work, and threatened to arrest them if they should proceed.
6th. That on the 28th of October, 1890, the said Collins, as intendant, informed plaintiff that he objected to the erection of said buildings, because he claimed the same to be on an alley, which was the property of the town of Beaufort, and threatened to enter upon said premises and pull down and remove said buildings, under and by virtue of the powers conferred upon the defendants in relation to streets.
7th. That if said threats are carried out, the damage to plaintiff will be irreparable—that a number of suits would be necessary to recover damages sustained by him.
Wherefore, an injunction is demanded, restraining defendants from pulling down and removing said buildings, and from committing any other trespass upon the said premises.
In this State, we have no authoritative determination of the question (unless it be in the case of Owens v. Lucas, 1 Brev., 519, where, however, the exact point was not decided, though the case does lend some support to our view), for the cases of Parkins v. Dunham, 3 Strob., 224, Bowen v. Team, 6 Rich., 298, and Hutto v. Tindall, Ibid., 396, cited by the Circuit Judge, as well as the case of Barnwell v. Magrath, 1 McMull., 173, were all cases between private individuals, where the question with which we are concerned could not arise. It is true, that, in the case of The State v. Pettis, 7 Rich., 390, the question under consideration might have been made, but it was not, perhaps, for the reason that the case went off upon another ground. In the absence, then, of any authoritative decision in this State, we are disposed to adopt the rule as laid down by Judge Dillon, supra, because it seems to us to have the support of reason. As we understand it, the theory upon which title by adverse possession rests is, that such possession for the required time affords a legal xiresumption that a title has been made, but has been lost; but where the party, against whom title is asserted by adverse xiossession, never had the power to make a title, there is no room for such a presumption; and this doctrine seems to have been imxiliedly recognized in Lamb v. Crosland, 4 Rich., 536, though that is not the point decided in that case. Now, as a municixial corporation has no power to sell or alien the streets or alleys of a town, it would be altogether illogical to presume that it had done what it never had the power to do.
"We think, therefore, that mere adverse possession, for the statutory period, of a street or alley in a town, which is a public highway, cannot confer a title. But where such possession is accomx>anied with other circumstances, which would render
It seems to us, therefore, that the Circuit Judge erred in holding otherwise, and that, for this reason, the case must go back for a new trial upon the principles herein announced.
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and that the case be remanded to that court for a new trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CROCKER v. COLLINS
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- Syllabus
- 1. Demurrer—Inaccuracy in Name.—If the name of the defendant, a municipal corporation, is not correctly stated in the complaint, demurrer is not the proper mode of objecting. 2. Ibid.—Motion to Make More Definite.—The allegations of this complaint were sufficient to show that the acts complained of were done by the executive officer of the defendant corporation; if more distinctness and particularity was desired of defendant, motion to that end, and not demurrer, was the proper mode of procedure. 3. Ibid.—Statements of Complaint.—The question, whether title to a street or public alley of a town can be acquired against the town by adverse possession, cannot be raised by demurrer, where there is no allegation in the complaint that the land in dispute had ever been, in fact, a street or alley. 4. Municipal Corporation—Streets—Adverse Possession—Estoppel.—Inasmuch as a municipal corporation has no right to alien its public streets and ways, no presumption of a title once acquired thereto from the corporation can arise. Therefore, the adverse holding of a street or alley for the statutory period gives no title as against a town to the adverse holder, but such holding, if accompanied with other circumstances, may operate to estop the town from now asserting its right to the use. 5. Ibid.'—Ibid.—Abandonment.—Upon the same principle, mere non-use by the town of a street or alley for twenty years will not amount to such abandonment as would destroy the rights of the public to their renewed use.