Anderson v. Wood

80 Ill. 15 | Ill. | 1875

Mr. Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a proceeding on the equity side of the circuit court of Knox county, hy hill exhibited by Hannibal P. Wood, supervisor of the town of Sparta, in that county, jointly with James M. Holyoke and William Bobison, as residents and tax-payers in that township, setting forth various proceedings to lay out a road and vacate a road, and in which damages were claimed, alleging that the same were illegal, and praying that the payment of damages be enjoined and also the laying out and vacating the road, and that the injunction may he made perpetual.

Ole Anderson, on his motion, as a party interested, was made a defendant to the hill, and having answered the same in detail, averring the legality of the proceedings, moved for a dissolution of the injunction, which was denied, and, on final hearing, the injunction was made perpetual as prayed.

To reverse this decree, the defendant, Anderson, appeals. The errors he has assigned present the merits of the controversy, and we have duly considered them.

The road sought to be laid out is described as commencing at the south-east corner of section twenty-four (24) in the town of Sparta, running thence north eighty (80) rods, thence west one hundred and sixty (100) rods, thence north on the half section line to the centre of section thirteen (18) in the same town. The road proposed to be vacated is described as “ a road known as the Lime Iiiln road, commencing at the same south-east corner of section 24, and running northwesterly across said section to the south-west corner of the north-west quarter of the north-west quarter of said section twenty-four (24).”

It is unnecessary to specify the proceedings complained of, which were made the basis of the injunction, as the merits can be understood and disposed of in the consideration of two only, and which are the most important.

These proceedings were had under the act of April 11,1873, entitled, “An act in regard to roads and bridges in counties under township organization,” containing one hundred and twenty-seven sections. R. S. 1874, ch. 121, p. 912.

Their validity, by which the new road was laid out, and the “ Lime Kiln road ” vacated, must be tested by this act.

We have examined these proceedings with the statute before us, and do not discover any substantial departure from its various provisions, in regard to laying out one road and vacating another.

Some comment is made that this petition prayed for a new road, and vacating an old one, and it is suggested these objects can not be comprehended in the same petition. A fair interpretation of sections sixty-nine to seventy-seven, inclusive, warrants the course pursued in this case, and there is a necessity for so construing the law, for in very many cases it would be difficult, if not impossible, to decide upon the propriety of laying out a new road without involving the consideration of a necessity for the old road, should a new one be determined on; the latter being to be so laid out as to render the old road useless, and to save multiplicity of proceedings to attain the same end, the petition can rightfully embrace both objects.

The main ground of controversy between these parties seems to be, first, that the commissioners of highways failed to act on the sixth day of ISTovember, 1873, the day on which, according to tiie notice, they were to meet, and that they made no adjournment to any other day, to hear reasons for and against laying out the new road, or vacating the old road.

The answer to this is, and the record shows, that the commissioners met on that day pursuant to the notice, and went upon and viewed the line of the road, and thereafter, on the same day, announced they would not order the new road to be established. This decision was not committed to writing until the 8th day of ^November, and was filed on that day, in the office of the town clerk. This, we think, was a substantial compliance with section seventy-three. It can hardly be held here ivas an adjournment of the meeting, for a public announcement was made of the final decision of the commissioners on the sixth, the day of their meeting. The decision was committed to writing on the eighth, and filed with the town clerk within the ten days required by the statute.

It is claimed, secondly, that appellant failed to comply with the statute as to the necessary steps in perfecting his appeal, he not giving notice of the time and place when such appeal would be heard.

Section 99 provides, that any person interested in the decision of the commissioners of highways, may appeal from such decision to three supervisors of the county outside of the town, etc., by giving a written notice of such appeal to the said commissioners of highways, and to at least three of the petitioners, and also to the same parties a notice when and where such appeal will he tried, at least three days before such Trial, within ten days after such decision lias been filed in the office of the proper clerk; and shall also ¡iresent a written petition to some justice of the peace of the county, asking for an appeal, and stating on what grounds the appeal is taken; and, by section 102, shall file with the justice of the peace, or town clerk, a sufficient bond, which was done. The adverse decision of the highway commissioners was filed in the office of the town clerk on November 8th. On the 13th of that month, appellant, Anderson, presented his petition to one Dunkle, a justice of the peace of the county, asking for an appeal, stating therein the grounds on which the appeal was taken.

Notice of the appeal was served in writing on all these commissioners of highways, and on three of the petitioners, hv the loth of November; that three supervisors, naming them, outside of the town of Sparta, had been duly summoned by Dunkle, a justice of the peace, and that they would meet at the Fonnen school house, in the town of Sparta, on the 24th of November, 1813, at ten o’clock in the forenoon, for the purpose of hearing the appeal and determining the same, and also the purpose of the appeal.

The supervisors were duly served with the summons, and fixed the 28th day of November as the day of their meeting at the Fonnen school house.

Notice to hear the appeal on the 28th was duly served on the highway commissioners, and three petitioners.

On the 2Sth of November, at the Fonnen school house, the selected supervisors, the three highway commissioners, and two of the petitioners for the road, met at the hour appointed, and, by common consent, the hearing of the appeal was postponed until the 5th day of December following, at the Fonnen school house, at ten o’clock on the morning of that day, and the same publicly announced, and a notice thereof posted on the front door of the school house.

On this fifth day of December, at the time and place specified, the three supervisors, the three commissioners of highways, and parties interested and their attorney, appeared to hear and determine the appeal. After examining the route of the proposed road, and hearing the reasons for and against, the supervisors reversed the order of the highway commissioners, and decided the road should be laid out, as prayed, and publicly announced this as their decision, on the 5th of December, 1873.

Counsel for appellee is mistaken in supposing the notice of the meeting on the 28th of November was not served tejí days previously. That notice was in time, as appears in the record. The jiotice of the adjournment to the 5th of December was posted on the 28tli of November, and was regular. The ground assumed by counsel is, that notice of the meeting on the 28th of November not having been served in time, the supervisors acquired no jurisdiction to hear the appeal on the 5th of December.

We have no doubt the appearance of the three commissioners and two of the petitioners before the supervisors on the 28th of November, was a full appearance, and waived whatever informality there might have been in the notice, and the postponement to the oth of December, by common consent, was proper. No argument can be drawn from the tact that, in the summons of the justice of the peace to three supervisors, he fixed the day of meeting on the 24th of November. The statute does not and did not give him the power to select the day of meeting. That is for the supervisors to do. Section 100 provides, it shall be the duty of the justice of the peace to cause to be summoned three supervisors of the county, to hear such appeal, and said supervisors shall fix upon a time and place when said appeal will he heard by them.

These supervisors, on being summoned, fixed upon the 28th of November as the time, and the Founen school house as the place, of which all parties interested had due notice, and then and there personally appeared. There can he no question of jurisdiction, nor can we perceive any error in its exercise. The meeting on the 5th of December cured, we think, any irregularity, if there was any, in the adjournment on the 29th of ^November.

There is no point made on the proceedings to assess damages, nor on the subsequent proceedings of January 26, 1874.

As presented to ns by this record, we are of opinion the proceedings to lay out this road and vacate the Lime Kiln road, were in substantial compliance with the statute, and the parties interested should not have been enjoined in their attempt to carry into effect the order of the supervisors on appeal.

The injunction, having been improvidentlv granted, should have been dissolved on the answer of appellant, and on the merits, as disclosed on the hearing. The principal objections relied on by appellee do not exist in fact, and no cause appears for equitable interference.

The decree is reversed and the bill dismissed.

Decree reversed.

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