State v. Auffart

Decision Date01 November 1915
Citation180 S.W. 571,192 Mo.App. 133
PartiesSTATE OF MISSOURI, Respondent, v. BENJAMIN AUFFART, Appellant
CourtKansas Court of Appeals

Appeal from Nodaway Circuit Court.--Hon. Wm. C. Ellison, Judge.

AFFIRMED.

Judgment affirmed.

William G. Sawyers for respondent.

Cook Cummins & Dawson for appellant.

JOHNSON J. TRIMBLE, J., concurring.

OPINION

JOHNSON, J.

--The defendant appeals from a conviction in the circuit court of Nodaway county under an information charging him with the obstruction of a public highway. During the progress of the trial the parties, with the aid of suggestions from the court, endeavored to reduce the issues to a single question of law and, feeling they had succeeded, agreed that the jury might be discharged and the cause submitted to the court sitting as a trier of the facts. But from the positions assumed by the parties in this court it appears they were not as successful in eliminating controversial facts as they believed at the trial.

In the early settlement of Nodaway county and more than thirty years ago, Charles Carr, the owner of a large tract of land near Maryville, laid out and opened to public use a road about fifty feet in width running east and west across his land along a section line. The road was not opened pursuant to order of court or any statutory proceedings and it became a public highway solely by dedication in pais and public user. During the past thirty years or more the boundaries of this road apparently were marked by hedge fences set out and grown by Carr, the owner, but it is claimed by defendant that the south boundary line, at first was defined by a post and board fence which Carr built on a line from six inches to three or four feet north of the line of the hedge subsequently planted. When the hedge became a barrier sufficient to turn stock, the fence was allowed to decay and disappear and has been wholly non-existent for more than thirty years. Some years ago Carr died, his land descended to his heirs and the land on the south side of the road is in possession of defendant as tenant. In April, 1914, defendant built a post and wire fence on the line which he claims was the line of the first post and board fence; that is to say, on a line from six inches to three or four feet north of the hedge, and this new fence constitutes the obstruction alleged in the information.

At the first of the trial, counsel for defendant, in answer to a question from the court, announced the position of the defendant to be that the road in question "is a public road by dedication without any definite boundary lines and the defendant had a right to put his fence where he did, so that he didn't interfere with the public use of the road."

It appears from the evidence that the roadway actually traveled by the public and maintained in condition for such use was in the middle of the space between the hedges; that there was a drainage ditch along the south line of that roadway and south of the ditch there was a bank four or five feet high. The space between the top of the bank and the hedge never had been worked or used for travel, but for some years had been occupied by a telephone pole line which, approximately, is on the line of the new fence. From a colloquy in the record, the court seems to have understood counsel for defendant as taking the position that the road actually dedicated in pais by Carr "is only a road insofar as it was actually traveled and used" and, therefore, that defendant had a right to treat the space on the top of the bank north of the hedge as his own land upon which he might build a fence at any place he chose. On this supposition the court concluded that the case was reduced to a single question of law and strongly intimated that the fact of whether or not a fence first had been built by Carr along the line of the present fence was unimportant, saying to counsel for the State, "You ought to be willing to admit for the purposes of this case there was some sort of fence there where this wire fence is now thirty odd years ago." Counsel replied that he would admit that fact "for the sake of this case" but asserted that he was prepared to show by witnesses that such fence never had been in existence.

As the trial progressed, counsel for defendant indicated that the real point advanced in defense of the action was that the old fence marked the south boundary line of the land dedicated by Carr and that in the absence of use by the public of the narrow strip added to the right of way by the substitution of the hedge for the old fence, there was no dedication of that strip and the boundary between the road and defendant's land is still on the line of the old fence.

Such is the contention now pressed upon our attention and we are cited to the following cases as sustaining it: Moore v. Hawk, 57 Mo.App. 495; State v. Campbell, 80 Mo.App. 110; Board ex rel. v. McPhearson, 172 Mo.App. 369, 157 S.W. 857.

We think defendant has failed to bring himself within the...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT