Hill v. Southern Ry.
Hill v. Southern Ry.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an appeal from an order of nonsuit. The complaint alleges that the plaintiff is the owner and in the exclusive and peaceable possession of a certain lot of land in the town of Union, containing one and one-half acres, situate within a quarter of a mile of the court house and within the original limits of said town, as shown by the charter of 1837. That the defendant, on the 15th day of November, 1898, and on divers other days, wrongfully, unlawfully, wilfully and maliciously, and against the consent and written objection of the plaintiff, entered upon said lot, dug up her soil, trampled her grass, &c., to her damage $2,000.
The defendant, by its a’nswer, denied the material allegations of the complaint and set up certain defenses, which are not material in considering the questions raised by the exceptions.
The assignment of error in the exceptions numbered 1, 2 and 3 will be considered together and are as follows:
“1. Because his Honor erred in holding that the presumption of right and title to the Spartanburg and Union Railroad Company, under sec. XI. of its charter, by grant from the owner of the land upon which the said railroad may be constructed, together with 100 feet from the center of the track on each side of the same for railroad purposes, where *550 there was no written agreement or contract between the owner and the company, unless suit was brought within the period limited, applied to lots and lands within the corporate limits of the town of Union at the date of said charter, and in granting the nonsuit on this ground, and in holding that the presumption of the statute did not so apply, and in not refusing on that ground the motion for nonsuit.
“2. Because his Honor erred in holding that under the act of 1855, renewing and amending the charter of the town of Union (12 St., p. 371), the stating (in sec. 2 thereof) ‘the Spartanburg and Union Railroad depot now in course of erection in said town,’ ‘as a center’ from which the corporate limits of said town should be measured one-half mile instead of from the court house, gave the railroad company the right to go through and exercise the right of eminent domain, and have all the benefits of the presumptions under sec. XI. of its charter in the town of Union, as incorporated at the date of the charter of the railroad company, as fully as if the said charter had specifically provided that the said company should have the right to build and construct its road through the village of Union, and in granting the non-suit on this ground; and he further erred in not holding that the act in no way affected the rights and liabilities of the said railroad company, under its charter, and in not refusing the nonsuit for that reason.
“3. Because his Honor erred irl holding that the making (in the amended town charter, 12th St.) the railroad depot the point from which to measure the corporate limits of the town, showed the intention of the legislature, in the charter of the railroad company (1845), to give the railroad company the right of eminent domain in and the right to construct its road through the town of Union, as then incorporated, and to give the railroad company everything it should need or want anywhere.”
*551
There was also testimony to show that in the lifetime of plaintiff’s father, who died in 1869, the lots in question were fenced up to the edge of the railroad, and that he claimed the land exclusively as his own.
In Railway Co. v. Beaudrot, 63 S. C., 266, 41 S. E., 299, Mr. Justice Jones thus states the doctrine in such cases: “It appears in the ‘Case’ that the defendant had erected within the alleged right of way a substantial fence enclosing what defendant claimed exclusive of any right therein by plaintiff. *553 Such an assertion of right to exclusive occupancy of the land is not compatible with the right of easement belonging to the plaintiff. If such adverse holding should run for the statutory period, the easement would be defeated. We do not say that the mere use or occupation of land, within the right of way acquired by a railroad company, is such adverse use as would give currency to the statute of limitations, unless the use is’inconsistent with the easement; but we do say that the enclosing of land within the right of way, under a claim of exclusive right to use and occupation, and a refusal to remove the enclosure after demand therefor, is some evidence of the assertion of a claim, incompatible with plaintiff’s alleged easement, which, under the issues raised, ought to have been submitted to the jury.” This principle is affirmed in the case of Matthews v. Southern Ry. Co., ante, 499. This exception is sustained.
It is the judgment.of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed and the case remanded to that Court for a new trial.
Reference
- Cited By
- 10 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Railroads — Union—Right oe Way. — The provision in the charter of the Spartanburg and Union Railroad in requiring the road to be located near the village of Union, is complied with by building it through the village, and thereunder the railroad had the right to acquire right of way through the lots in the village. 2. Nonsuit. — Exception raising error in granting nonsuit on ground not raised on Circuit, not considered. 3. Railroads — Right oe Way — Adverse Use — Jury—Title.—Where ■there is evidence of the adverse use and claim of part of the right of way of a railroad, inconsistent with its use for corporate purposes, for the period requisite to acquire title by prescription, the question of title should be submitted to’ the jury. 4. Exception too general.