Dahlstrom v. Anderson
Dahlstrom v. Anderson
Opinion of the Court
In this action the appellants sought to enjoin the respondent from enclosing a tract of ground claimed to be a public highway. Without the use of maps, which cannot well be reproduced here, it is somewhat difficult
The report of the viewers and surveyor is quite as indefinite as the petition for the road, and it is impossible to tell from the report, or the field notes of the surveyor accompanying the report, the location of the road with reference to the government surveys, or with reference to any natural or artificial monument with which the government surveys are connected. What was done by the supervisor towards opening the road does not appear, but the people for a number of years used a way as a wagon road and for horseback and foot travel running in the general direction of the surveyed road.
Some years after the survey the owner of a part of the-land over which the road passed platted the same into blocks, seemingly without regard to the road thought to-have been established by the proceedings above mentioned. This plat was called “Farmdale Homestead,” and while it showed a county road extending across it, the road shown does not correspond in its courses or distances with the field* notes of the surveyed road. In 1889, the owners of the Farm-
The block in Gilman Park was 550 feet in length, east and west, by 200 feet in width, north and south, and was divided into 22 lots, numbered from 1 to 11 from west to east on the northern tier, and 12 to 22 from east to west on the southern tier. The north line of block 49 of the Farmdale Homestead tract was found to cross the south line of block 59 of the Gilman Park tract near the southeast comer of lot 17 therein, and extend in a northwesterly direction, crossing the west line of the block near the southwest corner of lot 1, thus making fractional lots 17, 18, 19, 20, and 21, and obliterating 22 almost entirely.
Some time prior to the commencement of this action, the appellants became the owners by purchase of fractional lots 19, 20, and 21, and the west half of lot 18, in block 59, Gil-man Park, and erected dwellings thereon. At the time of the purchase, that part of block 49 of the Farmdale Homestead tract lying in block 59 of the Gilman Park plat was open, and the appellants and their tenants had access to the street on the south of the block by passing over the unenclosed land. Later on, however, the respondent purchased fractional lot 17, and the east half of lot 18 together with that part of block 49, which lay immediately south of these lots and enclosed the tract purchased with a fence. The effect of this was to cut off the appellants and their tenants from the acknowledged public highways, and they thereupon instituted this action.
As to the first contention, if it could be said that the proceedings had before the King county commissioners established a road at all, the proof does not show that the tract fenced by the respondent formed a part of it. The only evidence on the question is the testimony of an engineer called by the appellants themselves. He stated that the road, as he projected it from the field notes returned by the surveyor, did not come closer than 105 feet of this particular tract. Nor is there any evidence that the road as opened by the supervisor under the order of the county commissioners passed over this particular tract. There was some evidence, it is true, that in the earlier times this particular tract had been used as a public way both for wagons and pedestrians, but this is not proof of the establishment of a county road over the tract by the duly constituted county officers. If it were conceded, therefore, that the very indefinite record made by the county commissioners was sufficient to establish a lawful county road, we could not find that the road so established passed over the particular tract in question here.
The evidence to the effect that a public way over the tract had been established by use is much stronger, but we do not think it possesses that certainty required in such cases. When travel first began along the route over which the road was attempted to be established, the country was open and re
Rudkin, C. J., Chadwick, and Gose, JJ., concur.
Mokkis, J., took no part.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- H. Dahlstrom v. John S. Anderson
- Cited By
- 1 case
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- Published
- Syllabus
- Highways — County Roads — Establishment — Evidence — Sufficiency. The evidence is insufficient to show the establishment of a county road over certain lands, where the county commissioners’ record of an order establishing the road was so indefinite that it could not be located with reference to the government subdivisions, and an engineer’s projection of the field notes of the survey did not bring the road within 100 feet of the land in question, and there was no proof that the road as opened by the supervisors passed over the land. Same. Proof of user, in early times, of a road as a public highway, is not proof of establishment of a county road over the tract by county officers. Highways — Establishment—Prescription. A public highway by prescription over certain lands is not established by proof that, in an open country, a road had been used in the general direction claimed, changes having been made in the travel as the country settled up until the whole section was platted, with streets and cross streets, and at the time of the trial the change in travel was so complete that no part of the original way remained in existence unless over the particular strip, public buildings and dwellings having been built in the road as shown by the earlier maps, portions of it having been fenced, and no part of it having been used as a road for many years.