The testator of the defendants in error commenced in his
lifetime an action against the District of Columbia for trespasses
on land of his in the District. The alleged trespasses consisted in
entering on the land and digging up and removing, under claim of
right, a quantity of gravel to be used for repairing and
constructing public highways. The testator died before the action
was brought to trial. His executors brought it to trial and secured
a verdict and judgment in their behalf, which was sustained by the
Court of Appeals of the District. The issues involved are stated
fully by the Court in its opinion here, on which statement it is
held:
(1) That as there was no evidence of a formal grant, and as the
District relied upon an alleged dedication of the trust to the uses
to which the District put it, the issue was properly submitted to
the jury;
(2) That the Court did not err in holding and instructing the
jury that the use of the tract by the public must have been adverse
to the owner of the fee;
(3) That there was no error in holding and instructing the jury
that the prescriptive right of highway was confined to the width as
actually and without any intermission used for the period of twenty
years;
(4) That there was no error in so instructing the jury as to
deprive the District of a legal presumption that the public acts
required to be performed by it in order to give the right claimed
had been performed;
(6) That there was no error in leaving to the jury the question
whether
Page 180 U. S. 93
the District of Columbia had done the acts constituting the
trespass, without the execution of its lawful powers according to
law;
(6) That there was no error in submitting to the jury the
question whether the gravel was obtained incident to the lawful
exercise of the power to grade;
(7) That there was no error in sustaining the twelfth prayer of
the defendants in error, and thereby submitting to the jury to find
and determine both the law and facts of the case, and also thereby
holding that, if the jury found any one of the facts enumerated in
said prayer without regard to its probative force, it would tend to
prove that Harewood Road was not a public way, and rebut any
presumption that it was a public highway;
(8) That there was no error in refusing the twenty-third prayer
of the District;
(9) That the Court properly instructed the jury that they might
enhance the damages that would make the claimants whole by any sum
not greater than the interest on such account from the time of the
filing of the original declaration.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action for damages, which was brought by Conway
Robinson against the District of Columbia for certain alleged
trespasses on his land called the "Vineyard." The trespasses
consisted in breaking and entering his close, and digging a trench
386 feet long, 33 feet wide, and 14 feet deep, and carrying away
4,683 cubic yards of gravel. The grounds of action were presented
in several counts. The District pleaded the general issue and the
statute of limitations. The plaintiff joined issue on the first
plea, and demurred to the second. No disposition was made of the
demurrer until February 18, 1884, when the death of the plaintiff
was suggested.
On the 29th of October, 1886, the defendants in error,
executors
Page 180 U. S. 94
of Conway Robinson, filed an amended declaration presenting the
cause of action in three counts. The first alleged the taking of
the gravel from Harewood Road; the second, its taking and using
upon other roads; the third, the breaking and entering the close;
the fourth, the breaking and entering the close and the excavation
of a trench, thereby separating parts of the close from other parts
and impairing its value as suburban property.
On December 30, 1896, the District pleaded the general issue to
the amended declaration. Issue was joined on the plea.
Subsequently, by leave of the court, the District filed additional
pleas. First, the statute of limitations of three years; second,
liberum tenementum; third, that the trespasses complained
of consisted in the excavation and removal of gravel and soil from
within the lines of a public highway known as Harewood Road. Upon
motion, the first plea was stricken out and a demurrer was
sustained to the second. The case was tried on the general issue
and the third plea.
A verdict was rendered for the plaintiffs (defendants in error)
in the sum of $8,000, and a judgment was duly entered thereon. It
was affirmed by the Court of Appeals, 14 App.D.C. 512, and the case
was then brought here.
The errors assigned are on exceptions taken to the giving,
refusing, and modifying instructions. It is not necessary to detail
the testimony. It is enough to say that it tended to support the
issues made by the parties respectively, and to support the claim
that Harewood Road was a public highway. For the latter, the
District relied upon prescription and dedication arising from
twenty years' use by the public, and also upon the action of the
Levy Court in relation to the road.
For the statutes in regard to the Levy Court and its functions,
we may quote from the opinion of the Court of Appeals as
follows:
"The law of Maryland in force at the time of the cession of the
District declared that the county courts 'shall set down and
ascertain in their records, once every year, what are the public
roads of their respective counties.' Act 1704, c. 21, sec. 3. "
Page 180 U. S. 95
"The Act of Congress, July 1, 1812, empowered the Levy Court to
lay out public roads, condemn lands therefor, and so forth, and
provided that, when a road shall have been so established, marked,
and opened, they shall return the courses, bounds, and plat thereof
to the clerk of the county to be by him recorded, and it shall
thereafter be taken, held, and adjudged to be a public road. 2
Stat. 771, c. 117."
"Section 2 of the Act of May 3, 1862, declares that all roads
which have been used by the public for a period of twenty-five
years or more as a highway, and have been recognized by the Levy
Court as public county roads, and for the repairs of which the Levy
Court has appropriated and expended money, shall be public highways
whether they have been recorded or not. Section 3 provides that,
within one year from its passage, the Levy Court shall cause the
county surveyor to survey and plat all such roads and have the same
recorded. In making the survey, he was required to follow as near
as possible the boundaries heretofore used and known for the
highway and to mark the same at all angles with stones or posts. 12
Stat. 383. This time for surveying, platting, and recording was
extended three years by Act of February 21, 1863, 12 Stat. 658, and
again for three years from July 1, 1865, by Act of June 25, 1864,
13 Stat.193. The Revised Statutes of the District (A.D. 1874) also
provide that all public roads which have been duly laid out or
declared and recorded as such are public highways, Rev.Stat.D.C.,
sec. 246, and that every public highway shall be surveyed and
platted, and that a certificate of the survey and plat shall be
recorded in the records kept for that purpose. Rev.Stat.D.C. sec.
248."
"The penalty provided for the obstruction of public roads, as
reenacted in the Revised Statutes of June 22, 1874, is limited to
such as had been used and recognized for twenty-five years prior to
May 1, 1862, and which 'were thereafter duly surveyed, recorded,
and declared public highways according to law.' Rev.Stat.D.C., sec.
269."
Whatever evidence is necessary to illustrate the instructions
will be stated hereafter.
There is an assignment of error which in effect, though in
Page 180 U. S. 96
form an attack on instructions, questions the sufficiency of the
evidence to justify any recovery, and which asserts that it was the
duty of the court to have taken the case from the jury. In other
words, it is claimed that the trial court should have decided, and
not left to the jury to decide, that the road was a public highway.
It is not clear upon what the contention is rested -- whether it is
rested on the ground that the road was established by the Levy
Court, or that evidence showed beyond reasonable dispute that the
road had been acquired by adverse use, or had been dedicated by
plaintiffs' predecessors in the title. But the evidence did not
establish either conclusion beyond reasonable dispute. Both
conclusions were disputable and disputed, and whether they were or
were not justifiable inferences from the evidence, which was
conflicting, was for the jury to determine, not for the court, and
the court properly declined to do so. What were within the
functions of the court and what were within the functions of the
jury are questions entirely aside from the distinction between
public and private ways and the manner of acquiring either --
whether by grants or by acts
in pais establishing title by
dedication or prescription, the propositions which counsel have
learnedly argued.
There is no evidence of a formal grant. The dedication of the
road, or the prescriptive right of the public to it, was sought to
be proved by the acts of the owners of the land and certain uses by
the public. There was opposing evidence, or rather evidence of
opposing tendency which could be claimed to show that the use by
the public was in subordination to the title -- was permissive, not
adverse. The issue hence arising was properly submitted to the
jury.
The other assignments of error are more specific, and exhibit
for review the legal propositions which were involved in the
issues. These are that the court erred in the following
particulars:
(1) In holding and so instructing the jury that the use of the
road by the public must have been adverse to the owner of the
fee.
(2) In holding and instructing the jury "that the
prescriptive
Page 180 U. S. 97
right of highway is confined to the width as actually and
without any intermission used for the period of twenty years."
(3) By depriving the District of the presumption that the public
acts required to be performed were performed.
(4) By leaving to the jury a pure question of law -- to-wit,
"whether the District of Columbia had done the acts constituting
the trespass,
without the execution of its lawful powers
according to law.'"
(5) By submitting to the jury a question of law -- to-wit,
"whether the gravel was obtained incident to the lawful exercise of
the power to grade."
(6) By
"sustaining the granting of the twelfth prayer of the defendants
in error, and thereby submitting to the jury to find and determine
both the law and the facts of the case, and also thereby holding
that, if the jury found any one of the facts enumerated in said
prayer, without regard to its probative force, it would tend to
prove Harewood Road was not a public way, and rebut any presumption
that it was a public highway."
(7) By refusing the twenty-third prayer of the District,
"and thereby holding that the defendants in error were not bound
by the answer of the commissioners to the bill of discovery filed
by the testator of the defendants in error respecting the
bona
fides of the action of said commissioners in respect of the
alteration of Harewood Road and the purpose of such
alteration."
(8) By instructing the jury that they
"might enhance the damages that would make them whole by any sum
not greater than the interest on such amount from the time of the
filing of the original declaration."
1. The first proposition was presented by the following prayers
requested by the District and modified by the court. The words in
brackets were struck out by the court, those in italics were
added:
"II. If the jury believe from the evidence that the place where
the alleged trespasses were committed is part of the road called
the 'Harewood Road,' in the District of Columbia, and that the said
road had been used and recognized as a public county road for a
period of twenty-five years prior to May 3,
Page 180 U. S. 98
1862,
adverse to the plaintiffs' testator and those under
whom he claimed, and that said road was, after said
last-mentioned date and
prior to the 1st day of July,
1868, surveyed and recorded in the records of the Levy Court
as a public highway, then the [plaintiffs are not entitled to
recover in this action, and the verdict should be for the
defendant] the jury should find that the said roadway is a public
highway of the width that it had actually been used prior to May 3,
1862."
"
The maps introduced by the defendants are not such surveys
and records as the act of 1862 contemplated, but may be considered,
together with all the other evidence in the case bearing upon that
point, in determining whether such survey and record was
made."
"III. If the jury believe from the evidence that the place where
the alleged trespasses were committed is part of the road called
the 'Harewood Road,' in the District of Columbia, and that said
road was a public county road, generally used and recognized as
such by the public for an uninterrupted period of more than twenty
years prior to 1880,
and adversely to the plaintiffs' testator
and those under whom he claimed, under the control of and kept
up and repaired by the public authorities, and used by it publicly,
openly, and notoriously for all the purposes of a public highway,
under a claim of right, then the jury may and ought to presume a
grant of a right of way to the public over said road [and the
plaintiffs are not entitled to recover in this action, and the
verdict should be for the defendant]
to the width it had been
so used."
"V. [The rule of presumption is one of policy, as well as of
convenience, and is necessary for the peace and security of society
and] if the jury believe from the evidence that the public used
'Harewood Road' as a public highway whenever it saw fit, without
[asking] leave
of the owner and without objection
from
him, this is adverse, and uninterrupted adverse enjoyment for
twenty years constitutes a title which cannot afterwards be
disputed. Such enjoyment, without evidence to explain how it began,
is presumed to be in pursuance of a full and unqualified
grant."
"XX. If the jury believe from the evidence that Harewood
Page 180 U. S. 99
Road was, on May 3, 1862, a road within the County of
Washington, in the District of Columbia, which had been used by the
public
adverse to the plaintiffs' testator and those under whom
he claimed for a period of twenty-five years or more as a
highway, and had been recognized by the Levy Court of said county
prior to that date as a public county road, and the said
Levy Court had appropriated and expended money for the repairs of
said Harewood Road, then they are instructed that the said Harewood
Road was at the time of the alleged trespasses complained of a
public highway,
of the width it had been used, although
the same may not have been recorded."
But for the criticism of counsel, the modifications and
additions made by the court might be considered as having done no
more than to bring out more clearly the meaning of the prayers. The
recognition and control of the road by the District, and its use by
the public under "a claim of right" (third prayer), or "without
asking leave of the owner and without objection from him" (fifth
prayer), seem equivalent to a declaration of adverse use. Counsel,
however, now contend for a different meaning and a different
principle of law. They contend first, as we understand, that use
alone, without regard to the consent of the owner of the fee or his
attitude to the use, constituted the road a highway (prayer 2), and
required a grant of it to be presumed (prayers 3 and 5).
The contention is not justified. The use must be adverse to the
owner of the fee. The rule is correctly stated in 2 Greenleaf on
Evidence. The learned author, after defining prescription and the
period of possession which constituted it, and explaining the
modern practice which has introduced
"a new kind of title, namely, the presumption of a grant, made
and lost in modern times, which the jury are advised or directed to
find, upon evidence of enjoyment for sufficient length of
time,"
says: "In the United States, grants have been very freely
presumed upon proof of an
adverse, exclusive, and uninterrupted
enjoyment for twenty years." And after stating the quality of
presumption which arises, he continues:
"In order, however, that the enjoyment of an easement in
another's land may be conclusive of the right, it must have been
adverse -- that is, under
Page 180 U. S. 100
a claim of title, with the knowledge and acquiescence of the
owner of the land, and uninterrupted, and the
burden of
proving this is on the party claiming the easement. If he
leaves it doubtful whether the enjoyment was adverse, known to the
owner, and uninterrupted, it is not conclusive in his favor."
Secs. 538 and 539. Under a different rule, licenses would grow
into grants of the fee, and permissive occupations of land become
conveyances of it. "It would shock that sense of right," Chief
Justice Marshall said in
Kirk v.
Smith, 9 Wheat. 286,
"which must be felt equally by legislators and judges, if a
possession which was permissive and entirely consistent with the
title of another should silently bar that title."
2. This proposition arises on the following prayer given at the
request of the plaintiff:
"The jury are instructed that the right to an easement of common
and public highway, acquired by a prescriptive use or long use of
the road, is confined to the lines and width of the road as
actually used for and at the end of the period of twenty years, and
does not extend to a greater width beyond the width of the road so
actually used, and in this connection the jury are further
instructed that the planting or placing of the boundary stones
mentioned in the evidence, if the same occurred within twenty years
before the acts complained of, which are in evidence, would not
extend such easement
by prescription beyond the lines and
width of such actual use."
The same reason and principle applies to this as to the
preceding proposition. Relying for right of way on use, the right
could not extend beyond the use. Or, as it has been expressed,
"if the right to the way depends solely upon user, then the
width of the way and the extent of the servitude is measured by the
character of the user, for the easement cannot be broader than the
user."
1 Elliott on Roads, page 136, and cases cited.
3. This proposition is based upon the modifications by the court
of the twelfth prayer requested by the District. It was as
follows:
"[The Levy Court of the District of Columbia was a corporation.
Its duty, among other things, was to supervise and
Page 180 U. S. 101
keep in repair the public roads of the County of Washington, and
to plat, record, and mark with boundary stones such roads.]"
"If the jury find from the evidence that boundary stones were
placed along Harewood Road and at the point of the alleged trespass
by the surveyor of the Levy Court in 1865 or thereabouts, and that
thereafter said Levy Court worked and kept said road in repair,
then [in the absence of evidence to the contrary the presumption is
that]
it is a question for the jury to determine whether
said Levy Court caused said road to be surveyed, platted, and
recorded as a public highway in accordance with the act of Congress
[requiring the same to be done, and such presumption is not
overcome by the fact that the record of the survey and plat of said
road is lost or cannot be found],
and it will be competent for
them to so find if all the evidence establishes the fact to their
satisfaction, although no record of a survey and plat of said road
has been given in evidence."
The objection to the action of the court is that the District
was thereby deprived of the presumptions which attend and support
the acts of public officers.
One of the defenses made by the District was that the road had
become a highway under and by virtue of the acts of Congress
heretofore referred to. As a condition of this defense, it was
necessary to establish that the road had been surveyed, platted,
and recorded by the Levy Court, and it was the effect of the prayer
which was requested that the performance of that duty would be
presumed by the law from the fact that the road had been worked and
kept in repair by the Levy Court. In other words, such surveying,
platting, and recording would be presumed because it was the duty
of the Levy Court to have done them under the acts of Congress.
Undoubtedly the law indulges presumptions of the performance of
their duty by public officers, and presumptions of the existence of
circumstances which generally precede or accompany acts testified
to and which are necessary to their validity, but such presumptions
are in aid of the evidence. They are not independent of the
evidence, nor raised against it. The record shows that the
plaintiffs' testimony tended to establish "that the road was never
surveyed, platted, or recorded as a public road, as required by
Page 180 U. S. 102
law." The testimony on the part of the District was that the
secretary to the governor of the District, in 1871, obtained from
the former secretary of the Levy Court what were supposed to be all
of the records of the court, and turned them over to the treasurer
of the board of public works, and that those records may be among
the old records of the District, but witness did not know; nor did
he know what was among them, and had no distinct recollection of
any map of the road. Another witness, who was road supervisor from
1869 to 1871, testified that he saw the map of Harewood Road and
other roads among the records of the old Levy Court of the District
in its room in the city. He did not know, however, when the map was
prepared or by whom; that it embraced several roads; it was a map
of the District of Columbia and the roads in it. Another witness
(William T. Richardson), a civil engineer, testified that, under
the direction of the commissioners of the District, he found
records and maps of the Levy Court relating to Harewood Road; that
he found some maps, one made in 1873, in Governor Shepherd's time,
and also a copy of the Levy Court map; that the maps and records
were found in the vault of the old District building on First
street; that he found no other maps or records relating to the Levy
Court or Harewood Road; that the map found was a copy of the
original map showing the roads of the District, signed by a
president of the Levy Court and clerk; that the first map was in
pen work, and was an original made in 1873 under authority of an
act of the late legislative assembly of the District. There was
another map professing to have been made in 1857 by Mr. Boscke
while he was an employee of the District. The accuracy of the
Boscke map was testified to, and it and the other maps were put in
evidence.
The evidence therefore showed what the Levy Court did as to
surveying, platting, and recording the road, and the effect of it
could not be taken from the jury and a presumption substituted for
it. Such presumption might have been given to the jury as an
element of decision in connection with the evidence, and might have
been so given by the court, if asked.
The prayer was objectionable for another reason. It assumed that
a record of the survey and plat of the road was
Page 180 U. S. 103
made and lost. This was a fact in issue, and could not be
assumed. The court left the fact to be deduced from the evidence,
telling the jury, however, that they could infer it, although there
was no direct evidence of it.
4. The eighth prayer given at the request of the plaintiff was
as follows:
"If the jury believe from the evidence that, at the time of
doing the acts complained, which are in evidence, there was a right
of common and public highway in the defendant to a road of only
about twenty-five feet or less in width over the land of the
plaintiffs' testator, and that an excavation in excess of the
defendant's right of highway and of about thirty-three feet in
width was made by the defendant upon the land of plaintiffs'
testator, and believe from the evidence that the defendant so
exceeded its right of highway and excavated gravel on the land of
the plaintiffs' testator, and removed and used the same beyond the
limits of said land to repair or improve other public highways in
the District of Columbia, without making just compensation to the
owner of the soil, or having any condemnation proceedings,
or
exercising its lawful powers according to law, then the jury
are instructed that the defendant would be liable as a trespasser
for so doing, and that the jury must find for the plaintiff and
assess such damages as the evidence shows would make them
whole."
The italics are ours, and they indicate the words upon which the
District especially bases its objection. That objection is that a
pure question of law was submitted to the jury. The objection is
very general, and hardly attains to such specification of an error
as can be noticed. However, we have examined the charge of the
court, and think what was meant by the words objected to was
sufficiently explained.
5. The eleventh prayer asked by the plaintiff was as
follows:
"The burden of proof is upon the defendant to satisfy the jury
that the gravel was obtained incident to the legal exercise of the
power to grade. Such power, to be lawful, must have been exercised
by the commissioners jointly. It could not be exercised by any one
of the said commissioners, as the power could not in law be
delegated. If the gravel obtained and used
Page 180 U. S. 104
was not the incident to the exercise of the power to grade, but
was obtained without the lawful exercise of the power to grade,
then the use of the said gravel, as well as the said excavation,
was unlawful, and the defendant has not maintained its plea of
justification."
"
If the evidence shows to the satisfaction of the jury that
said grading or the removal of said gravel was done under the
supervision of the officers and by the employees of said defendant,
it will be competent for the jury to presume from this fact that it
was authorized and directed by the joint action of the
commissioners of the defendant unless there be evidence that
satisfies them that the contrary is the fact."
It is objected that the prayer submitted to the jury a pure
question of law -- to-wit, whether the gravel was taken as an
incident to the legal exercise of the power to grade. But a
definition accompanied the question. The jury was told that what
was meant by the legal power to grade was a power exercised by the
Commissioners jointly, and the court carefully added that such
legal power could be presumed from the supervision of the grading
by the officers and employees of the District. The prayer is not
amenable to the objection made.
6. The twelfth prayer requested by defendants in error, and
given by the trial court with the modifications expressed in
italics, was as follows:
"If the jury believe from the evidence that there was a lane or
road over the land of the plaintiffs' testator, yet if from the
evidence the jury believe that travel over said lane or road
originated for the accommodation of some prior owner or owners of
that tract and the adjoining tract, or either of said tracts, and
of those deriving title from or under such owner or owners of
either or of both of said tracts, and believe that said lane or
road was never surveyed, platted, or recorded as a public road or
highway, as required by law, and believe that the various owners of
said tract of land by mesne conveyances conveyed the same from one
to the other, with covenants of warranty, without showing,
mentioning, or excepting any lane or road over the same, either in
the body of any of these deeds or in plats annexed to any of them,
and believe that the location of
Page 180 U. S. 105
said lane or road or part thereof over the land of the
plaintiffs' testator was changed by Mr. John Agg, a prior owner of
said land, for the reason that he wished it further from his house,
and that he employed and paid the hands who made this change, and
believe that, from about 1843 to about the time of the conveyance
of May 15, 1857, to the plaintiffs' testator, gates were maintained
across said lane or road by the owner or owners of said tract of
their tenants, and that the gateposts of such gates continued to
stand for some time after the gates themselves wore out or
disappeared, and stood there until sometime in 1861, after the late
war had commenced, and believe that taxes were assessed by the
public authorities upon and paid by the owners of said land or
their tenants upon said tract of land as a whole, including land
within the limits of said lane or road, and believe that acts of
ownership over the land within the limits of said lane or road were
exercised by the plaintiffs' testator, and believe that said lane
or road was not repaired by the public authorities until after the
late civil war, or recognized by the public authorities as a public
road until after the late civil war, or if the jury believe any of
these facts, then the jury are instructed that these facts, or any
of them which the jury may believe, would tend to prove that said
lane or road was not a common or public highway, and would tend to
rebut any presumption of its being a common or public highway, and
any and all such facts, if believed by the jury, are to be
considered in connection with the other evidence in the case, and
if the jury upon the whole evidence believe that said lane or road
was not such a highway at the time of the acts complained of which
have been given in evidence,
and was not a highway by
dedication, then they should find the issue joined upon the
defendant's third additional plea of highway in favor of the
plaintiffs."
The objection that this prayer left to the jury to decide the
law and the facts of the case is not justified, nor that it was
held that, if any one of the enumerated facts was proved, the
Harewood Road was not a public way. The prayer summarized the facts
in evidence, but did not express an opinion as to their probative
force, whether collectively or separately considered.
Page 180 U. S. 106
Each fact had some probative quality and value, and it was
proper for the court to say so, "and that any and all such facts,"
as the court remarked, "if believed by the jury, were to be
considered in connection with the other evidence in the case." And
the court further said:
"If the jury upon the whole evidence believe [not upon any one
fact believe] that the said lane or road was not such highway at
the time of the facts complained of, and was not a highway by
dedication,"
then they should find that the gravel was not removed from a
public highway, which was the defense made in the third additional
plea of the District.
7. The testator of defendants in error filed a bill for
discovery in 1882, on the equity side of the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia, against the District, its commissioners, and
two assistants of the engineer commissioner. The bill alleged that
he intended to bring an action against the defendants in said bill
for the trespasses which constitute the matter of the present
controversy, and, after stating with particularity the grounds of
discovery, submitted interrogatories to be answered by the
defendants, as to the time the acts were done which were complained
of as trespasses, by whom done, under whose superintendency, by
whom paid and out of what fund the work was paid for, the amount of
gravel or earth dug and where taken, if taken from the limits where
dug, and if any books, accounts, documents, or papers were kept
recording or evidencing the facts. Certain of the defendants made
answer under oath to the interrogatories. As to the probative force
of the answers, the District at the trial of the case at bar asked
the court to instruct the jury as follows:
"The jury are instructed that the plaintiffs are bound by the
answer of the commissioners
and the District of Columbia
to the bill of complaint of their testator [No. 7959, equity,
Supreme Court, District of Columbia] offered in evidence by them,
and so far as said answer is responsive to the allegations of said
bill it is the evidence of the plaintiffs themselves, and the jury
are not at liberty to ignore it or find the facts otherwise than in
said answer set forth."
The prayer was refused. Upon what ground, however, does
Page 180 U. S. 107
not appear. It might have been refused, and could have been,
even if it contained a correct declaration of law, on account of
its general character. It is attempted here to be particularized.
The specification of error is that the court, by refusing the
prayer, held
"that the defendants in error were not bound by the answer of
the commissioners to the bill of discovery filed by the testator of
the defendants in error respecting the
bona fides of the
action of said Commissioners in respect of the alteration of
Harewood Road and the purpose of such alteration."
Whether the trial court would have given the prayer if it had
been limited to the good faith of the District commissioners we
cannot know. Presumably not, if it made their answer in the
discovery suit conclusive proof, as claimed in the prayer which was
refused. The greatest strength of proof attributable to an answer
under oath in a suit in equity is that it cannot be overcome by a
single witness unaccompanied by some corroborating circumstance.
That it has even that strength in a common law court we are not
called upon to decide. It certainly has not conclusive strength.
Lyon v. Miller, 6 Grattan 427, 438, 439; 1 Pomeroy's
Equity Jur. ยง 208. The prayer requested was therefore properly
refused.
8. At the request of the plaintiff, the court instructed the
jury as follows:
"If the issues joined upon both of the defendant's pleas, which
issues are submitted to the jury, are found by them in favor of the
plaintiffs, then they are instructed that they may assess such
damages in favor of the plaintiffs as they believe from the
evidence would make the plaintiffs whole, and may [include]
enhance the damages by any sum not greater than the
interest on the amount from August 28, 1882, when this action was
brought, to the time of this trial [as part of the plaintiffs'
damages], if the jury [see fit to include such interest as damages,
and may consider the time during which the plaintiffs and their
testator were kept out of their money between those dates]
shall find from the evidence that such allowance would be
reasonable and just."
The objection is to the interest. It is not claimed that, in
cases of tort, interest may not be allowed in the discretion of
Page 180 U. S. 108
the jury. It is asserted that, under the circumstances of the
case, the court should not have submitted the claim of interest to
the jury. But it was the plaintiffs' right to have invoked the
exercise of the discretion of the jury, and the circumstances of
the case were to be considered by it in exercising such discretion,
and presumably were considered.
9. One of the issues in the case was whether the gravel was
taken as an incident to grading the road or for use on certain
streets in the District. There was also an issue as to the width of
the road and the right to take gravel outside of that width.
Prayers were asked on those issues. The ninth prayer of the
District was modified by the court and given as modified as follows
(the additions of the court are in italics):
"[Unless]
If the jury shall believe from the evidence
that Harewood Road at the point of the alleged trespass was a
public highway,
and that the gravel was taken in pursuance of
the power to grade, and not for the sole purpose of obtaining
gravel for use elsewhere, then if they find for the plaintiffs
in this case, they are instructed that the measure of damages is
the value to the plaintiffs' testator of such gravel as is shown by
the evidence to have been taken by the defendant from the
plaintiffs' testator's land exterior to the lines of Harewood Road,
and such damages, if any, to the residue of the land as was
occasioned by the removal of the gravel exterior to the boundaries
of the road."
The criticism of the court's action is that it allowed the jury
to consider the motive of the District in grading the road. We
think counsel misapprehended the purpose of the modifications of
the prayer. It did not question the motives of the District
authorities, nor did it assume anything that was not within the
issues of the case. The right to take gravel within the limits of
the road which might be established by the evidence, and in the
exercise of grading, was conceded. The right to take gravel outside
the limits of the road, or not for the purpose of grading it, was
denied, and properly denied. It was an easement in the land, not
the fee to the land, which the public acquired by the road, and the
measure of the easement was the width of the road. The right to
grade and improve was incident to the easement, but the easement
gave no other right in the soil
Page 180 U. S. 109
or to the soil. The right to remove soil from one part of a road
to another part may be conceded. And it has been decided such right
extends to other streets forming parts of the same system. Of this,
however, we are not required to express an opinion, as it is not
involved in the prayer.
Finding no error in the record,
The judgment is affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY took no part in the decision.