delivered the opinion of the Court*
This case arises on an appeal to the Circuit Court from an order of the County Commissioners of Leon county establishing a road. That Court having affirmed their decision, an appeal has been taken to this Court presenting the propriety of their action.
The appellee Cole presented a petition, alleging that “there has been on the proposed route a road, running throngh Dr. Edward Bradford’s land, of ingress and egress, for the last fifteen or twenty years ; that it is the nearest road of the petitioner to Tallahassee and to that portion of the neighborhood in which his practice lays ; that it would inconvenience persons sending for him in his professional business as a physician and compel them to go some five miles farther, and he prays the Commissioners to give it consideration and report whether or not the said Bradford would be damaged more by the road being opened or the community by its being closed.” To this the signature of A. S. Cole is attached. Added to this is a writing to this purport: “ We, the undersigned, residents of the neighborhood, join with A. S. Cole in his petition.” Signed, B. C. Williams, and some twenty others.
The Commissioners appointed three persons to view and mark out said road and report to the Board, as the law directs, who reported that they had marked out a road, giving its course and distance, and also stating their belief that the road is necessary and should be established, and that it would be of great convenience to the inhabitants, and further, that it has been a neighborhood road for a great many years. The Board of County Commissioners adopted this report, after hearing testimony and argument of counsel, and declared the x*oad “a public neighborhood road.”
An American writer of eminence expresses himself with force more fully as to the right with us and says: “In a State governed by a written Constitution, if the Legislature should so far forget its duty and the natural rights of an individual as to take his private property and transfer it to another when there is no foundation for the pretence that the public is to be benefitted thereby, such an abuse of the law of eminent domain would be an infringement of the letter as well as the spirit of the constitutional law and therefore is not within the general powers delegated to the Legislature.”1 — Angel on High,, 59; Varick vs. Smith, 5 Paige, 137.
The same writer again states: “The doctrine that th&
In the case of the West River Bridge Company vs. Dix, decided by the Supreme Court of the United States after elaborate argument and very mature consideration, views were expressed by the Court and more particularly by that distinguished rnan and eminent jurist, Judge Wood-bury, well deserving of regard. “I am even disposed to go further and say, that if any property of any kind is not so situated as to be either in the direct path for a public highway or be really needed to build it, the inclination of my mind is that it cannot be taken against the consent of the owner; because, though the right of eminent domain exists in some cases, it does not exist in all, nor as to all property, but probably as to such property only as, from its locality and fitness, is necessary to the public use.” — é Myl. & Craig, 116; 1 Rail. cases, 176.
As to the mode of proceeding, it is laid down to this effect: “Under our institutions, no man can be deprived ©f his rights, save by the law oí the land or the judgment of his peers; 'and when private property is to be taken, a3 in this case, for the public use, it is important that all the forms oí law should be complied with, for these forms have been devised and certain restrictions adopted for the protection of private right against public oppression.” — By Edwards, Judge, 1 Barb., 289; Angel on High., § 122.
With all this, we are not satisfied to declare that the law providing for the establishment of a neighborhood road
The order and decision, as well of the Board of County Commissioners as of the Circuit Court, will be reversed and set aside with costs and the case remanded to the Circuit Court that the proceeding may be dismissed.
