DocketNumber: 10316
Judges: Watts, Bowman, Orangeburg, Summer
Filed Date: 1/26/1920
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
*497 This was an action to recover damages resulting to the plaintiff from the obstruction, by the defendants, of a way leading over their lands to about 12 acres of land which the plaintiff had rented from one Tarrant; the damages extending over the years 1915, 1916 and 1917.
The demand in the complaint was not only for damages, but for an injunction pendente lite and for a permanent injunction restraining the defendants from obstructing the way.
After hearing of motion in the way of application for injunction before Judge Moore, who refused the same, and a-demurrer to the complaint by Judge Townsend, who heard and overruled the same, but allowed the complaint to be amended, and later, allowed another amendment to the complaint, and after issue was finally joined, the answer of the defendants was a general denial, and set up that there had never been a public highway or neighborhood road, running over or across the lands, mentioned in the complaint, and that there was not nor had there ever been any road or path across their lands, dedicated to the public or any individual, by grant, deed, prescription, or otherwise. The case was tried by Judge Bowman, and a jury, at Orangeburg, in June, 1918, when the jury found for the plaintiff $75 damages, and Judge Bowman made an order restraining the defendants from closing the road in question to travel.
After entry of judgment, defendants appeal, and by ten exceptions complain of error: In not granting a nonsuit. In not directing a verdict as asked for by the defendants. Error in Judge’s charge. Error in submitting to the jury whether or not the road in question constituted an easement to plaintiff’s 12 acres of rented land, as this question was not before the Court either in pleadings or proof.
The complaint alleged the obstruction of “a public highway or a public neighborhood road.” The evidence of the plaintiff and his witnesses was directed to prove the obstruction of a neighborhood road only.
*498
The evidence in the case shows that the road in dispute was built by the father of the defendant, Jacob Stroman, across his land to the edge of the woods, and later extended by him to his fish trap in the swamp.
There is no effort to show that the road was dedicated and accepted as a public road, or that the plaintiff or the public ever worked on it. It leads from a public highway to a landing near Edisto River, and ends at the landing. It was used, up to the time of the obstruction, as a way to the landing for the purpose of getting shingles, fishing, fish fries, and picnics.
The road in question ends on the edge of a swamp, several hundred yards from the shingle landing, and is connected *499 with the river through the swamp by a footpath. This cannot be construed as to constitute a terminus of a public road. The evidence here shows that the only persons who used the landing were three in number, in getting out and hauling shingles there, and used for fishing frolics and picnics. No other inference can be drawn from the evidence other than that the landing was private and not public, and that the road in question was private and not public. His Honor was in error in not granting nonsuit in the first instance, and in not granting a directed verdict in the second instance, as asked for by the defendants. These exceptions are sustained.
Judgment reversed.