Court Opinion

ID: 6236903
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-17 20:34:41.163587+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:58:04.616075
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Trunkey
delivered the opinion of the court,
Prior to 1842 a public road bad been opened on each bank of the river near its margin, and for about ten years a ford had been used by people who chose to cross from one road to the other, at or near the place of the ferry between the land of the defendants to the land of Webb. The road on the east bank of the river was vacated and another opened running in the same direction, about forty rods farther east. • Brown, who then occupied the land now owned by defendants, opened a lane from his barn out to this road, and the public passed over it and through an open field to the ford without hindrance. In 1843 or 1844, Tome, who succeeded Brown in occupancy, desiring to establish a ferry, contracted with Webb for a landing on the west side of the river; Webb gave the right of way for a landing and made and kept up the road from the landing to the public road, thirteen and one-half rods, for which he and his family were to be ferried across free of charge. This arrangement was carried out by Tome and his successors till the ferry was stopped shortly before the prosecution of the defendants. Tome put on the first ferry-boat at that place. In 1849 Tome made the part of the lane from the barn to the river, locating it a few rods south of the former place of travel. The lane varied *174in width from sixteen feet to thirty. Eor a time in I860 the ferry was stopped and the lane barred — the bars were taken away when the ferry was again started. Ten or twelve years ago the way near the landing was injured by a flood and the defendants moved the fence so as to make a passage. The fencing of the lane and keeping it in repair were by the occupants of the land. Neither time nor money was ever expended in its opening or improvement by the public. The foregoing facts are proved by the witnesses called by the Commonwealth.
At the date of the arrangement between Webb' and Tome respecting the ferry, the public had not acquired any right of way. None of the parties had chartered or prescriptive rights to a ferry there. It may be, as alleged by the learned counsel for the Commonwealth, that every other man “ had just as much right to ferry himself or his squaw across the river at that place as the occupant had, provided he paddled his own canoe but lie had no right to go ashore without permission of the owner or occupant of the land. The right to the bed of a navigable river is presumed to belong to the Commonwealth; but she has no right in the adjoining lands which have been vested in citizens, other than by eminent domain. The owner of the soil has the right of landing on the banks of all navigable rivers. No person can of right land his ferry-boat on another’s gronud, without permission. Nor can the Commonwealth grant such right, except upon compensation being made to the land-owner. Cooper v. Smith, 9 S. & R. 26.
This was a private ferry, the landings and ways made, owned and kept in repair by the occupants of the land. The presumption is that the tenants acted by the consent or procurement of the landlord. No man had a right to go to that ferry except on the implied invitation of its owner. The owner wanted customers — he proposed to carry them across the river for a consideration, and those who went accepted his terms.
It is not claimed by the Commonwealth that the owner of the land dedicated an easement to the public, but she claims that the lane became a highway because of user, on the principle that “ twenty-one years’ adverse use of a way under claim of right is sufficient to authorize the presumption of a grant, and if the use was open and notorious in the ordinary manner, the owner would be presumed to know and acquiesce therein.” This principle has been often repeated in cases where one man claims a way, that is, the right of going over another man’s ground. A user will not give title unless it be adverse and under claim of right, nor when it appears it was not done with the knowledge and acquiescence of the owner, or when the way is used under leave or favor and by permission and at the will of the owner. *175The presumption may be repelled by evidence which accounts for the possession or user without resorting to a title by grant or otherwise: Esling v. Williams, 10 Barr 126. If the use of the way by an individual is merely a ¡permissive use, no presumption of grant will arise from lapse of time. In order to establish a way by user, the user must be adverse, not permissive : Domuth v. Amweg, 9 Nor. 181. Like principles generally apply when the easement is claimed as public : Gowen v. Phil. Exchange Co., 5 W. & S. 141. The use of ground in front of a warehouse, extending to the river, by the public and by the owner for such purposes as he desired, for more than thirty years continuously, gave the public no right against the will of the owner, for the use was not adverse to him, but by his consent. And it was not exclusive by the public, but in common with him for travel and entirely in him for several purposes of a private character: Irwin v. Dixion, 9 How. 10. From the nature of wharf property the access must be kept open for the convenience of the owner and his customers; but the property continues private. No length of time during which the property is so used, can deprive an owner of his title, nor give the community a right to abate the owner’s fences over it as a nuisance on the ground that they have acquired a legal easement in it.
In this case the tenants could have used the lane just as they did for travel and teaming, whether it was a private or public road. It was the interest of the owner of the ferry to invite travelers by keeping an open way from the public road to the river and procuring the way from W ebb from the river to the road on the west side. Without such convenience his ferry would have been worthless. The business of the ferry and its receipts were increased by leaving the way open when the river was frozen and when fordable. To have closed the way at such times would have driven the customers to ferries above or below when a ferry would be necessary. Hence, the invitation was held out and permission given. No one was a trespasser, no one was liable to an' action for use of the lane or landings at any season of the year. Had the lane or landings got out of repair and the road commissioners been indicted for neglect of duty in suffering them to become impassable, it is probable that they would have discovered that the lane and landings were private property, and that neither the road commissioners, nor any other person, had ever done an act recognizing them as a public or township road.
The court was not bound to answrer the points presented by counsel for the Commonwealth, but the mere fact of doing so was not error. When affirmed, they became a part of the charge. *176As abstract propositions, those which were affirmed were substantially correct, yet without explanation some of them, we think, were well calculated to lead to an erroneous verdict. The jury were instructed that if the public have used a way as a highway “ across the land now occupied by defendants, to pass between the river ferry and the public road for twenty-one years, without protest or hindrance, they have acquired such a right as cannot be disturbed or questioned by the owner of the land;” that “ to acquire such a right the user need not be claimed or exercised as exclusive, it is enough that the owner permits it without objection or the assertion of his exclusive dominion over the locus in qxio, for other uses or purposesand that “ if the jury believed the roadway across the land of defendants, between the ferry and the public road, substantially as now claimed, was used by the public as a highway for twenty-one years, by the invitation of the owners, or with their knowledge and approval; the law will presume a grant by said owners not afterwards revocable.” Had the ferry been one in which the owner or tenant of the land had no interest, these propositions would have been fitting, but applied to the facts proved by the Commonwealth, to say nothing of the defendant’s evidence, they were misleading. By affirmance of the defendants’ second point the jury were rightly instructed that the public would not acquire a right by user for twenty-one years unless under such circumstances of acquiescence as clearly indicated the owner’s design to surrender control and donate the way to the exclusive use of the public. This availed nothing against the positive instruction that a user by the public as a highway of the road between the ferry and public road, for twenty-one years, by invitation of the owners, was an irrevocable legal presumption of a grant by the owners. If the owner invited the public to use the way he was not likely to protest against and hinder the use ; if he permitted the usé he did not object; yet the jury were told that its use as a highway without hindrance or objection vested a right in the public which cannot be disturbed. The propositions set forth in the first, second and fourth assignments of error either should have been refused or accompanied by remarks to the effect, that if the public for more than twenty-one years used the lane between the public road and a private ferry owned by the occupant of the land, under circumstances which showed it was permitted for the purpose of reaching the ferry, the public acquired no right of way; that to vest such right the user should have been adverse to the owner, and not by his consent; and if the jury believed the occupier or owner of the land opened a passage from tlie road to the river to his ferry and had obtained from the owner of the opposite shore, for a valuable considera*177tion, the right of landing and other necessary privileges, and that said passage was used by the public by invitation or permission of the owner of the ferry and the land, there was no such user as vested an easement, that such facts would repel the presumption of a grant arising from user for more than twenty-one years.
Judgment reversed, and it is ordered that the record, together with the opinion of this court setting forth the causes of reversal, be remitted to the court of Quarter Sessions of Warren county, for further proceeding.