The Supreme Court first cited the general law that to establish a highway by prescription it must be shown that the general public used the way continuously for a period of 20 years prior to 1968 and that the public use was adverse (i.e., without the owner’s permission). The primary evidence introduced to show the highway by prescription was maps that pre-dated 1968 by more than 20 years. The Court held that the maps, by themselves, were competent evidence to support an inference of continuous and uninterrupted public use but were not sufficient to support a finding that the public use was adverse to the owner over whose property the way traversed.
The Court held that to meet the adversity requirement, the nature of the use must be such as to show that the owner knew, or ought to have known, that the right was being exercised, not in reliance upon the owner’s permission, but without regard to the owner’s consent. The only evidence introduced in that regard was that the Town had used the area in question to allow its plow trucks to turn around safely. The Court held that this was insufficient to put the owner on notice that the use was adverse and being made under a claim of right by the Town. The Court appeared to establish the standard as whether or not a reasonable person would understand the municipality to be making a claim of right to the property by its use of the way.
Lessons learned from this recently decided case include:
- Maps predating 1968 are insufficient by themselves to meet the “adversity” requirement for establishing a highway by prescription;
- There must be some further indication of adversity, of a claim of right without the owner’s permission, such as stone walls or commercial enterprises along the road; and
- To establish the requisite adversity, the general standard is whether a reasonable owner would understand the public to be making a claim of right by its use of the way.