Case Name: JOHN L. BURDEN v. RICHARD T. HARMAN
Court: Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jurisdiction: North Carolina
Decision Date: 1860-06
Citations: 7 Jones 354
Docket Number: 
Parties: JOHN L. BURDEN v. RICHARD T. HARMAN.
Judges: 
Reporter: North Carolina Reports
Volume: 52
Pages: 354–356

Head Matter:
JOHN L. BURDEN v. RICHARD T. HARMAN.
A right of appeal exists under the statute, in the case of a ’petition for a cart-way.
In ordering the laying out of a cart-way, it is the duty of the Court, in its judgment, to fix both the termini of such way.
Petition for a cart-way, tried before Hick, J., at the last Spring Term of Bertie Superior Court.
The petition, in this case, was filed in the County Court of Bertie, and brought to the Superior Court by appeal. The prayer of .the petition is for a jury to lay off a cart-way over the lands of the defendant, leading to the fork of the Conaritsa and Snake-bite Roads at Thomas Rice’s. The judgment in the Superior Court, to which the case came by appeal, is as follows : “ It is ordered by the Court that a jury be summoned, wbo shall lay off a cart-way, beginning at plaintiff’s house, across the land of the defendant, in the direction of Rice’s cross-roads, and report to the next term.”
It appeared from the statement of the case, forwarded by his Honor,, that the lands of other persons laid between the land of tbe defendant and the station at Rice’s, and that these persons were not made .parties to the case. The Court, on •argument and proofs, as to many facts raised between the parties, granted the foregoing order, -from which the defendant appealed.
In this Court, -a motion was made to dismiss the appeal
Winston, Jr., for the plaintiff.
Garrett, for the defendant.

Opinion:
Battle, J.
The objection made by the plaintiff's counsel, that no appeal lies from the County to the Superior Court, on a judgment given in a petition for a cart-way, is clearly-untenable. It was settled to the contrary by the decision of the Court i-n the case of Ladd v. Hairston, 1 Dev. Rep. 368. No appeal was expressly given, in such a case, by the original act of 1798, (ch. 508, Rev. Code of 1820,) and none is now so given by the Revised Code, ch. 101, sec. 37; but in the casé referred to, it was held, that when the person, over whose land the cart-way was sought to be laid out, came in, upon inotice, and was made a party defendant to the petition, he was entitled to appeal under the general law 1777, (ch. 115, sec. 75, of the Rev. Code of 1820) which is re-enacted almost in todidem verbis by tbe last Revised Code, ch. 4, sec. 1.
Upon the merits of the case, it is manifest that the judgment of the Superior Court cannot be sustained. In petitions for a private cart-way, as in those for a public road, it is the -exclusive province of the Court to fix the termini of the way or road, leaving to the jury the xclusive province of laying out tlie route of such way or road between those termini; see Welch v. Piercy, 7 Ire. Rep. 365. That was a petition for a public road, but the principle, decided, applies with equal force to the case of a private cart-way. The judgment in the present •case fixes one, only, of the termini, leaving the other entirely indefinite. The way is to start from the house of the petitioner, and is to go in the direction of. Rice's cross-roads, but whether it is to go> to it, or near it, or to stop short of it, does not appear. The reason why the judgment is thus imperfect, we learn from the statement of the case, is, that the wajr, if laid out over the land of the defendant only, will not reach any public road, the land of another person not before the Court being interposed. The Court has no power to order the laying' out of a cart-way over the land of another, to stop in the woods. The petition ongbt to have stated the lands of all the persons over which it was intended to pass, and, by notice, to have made the owners parties, and then a proper judgment might have been given fixing the termini, and ordering a jury to lay out the route in such a manner as might be most convenient and proper for all the parties.
The judgment given was erroneous, and must be reversed.
Per Curiam,
Judgment reversed.