25 Minn. 123 | Minn. | 1878
The plaintiff, claiming to be owner in possession of certain land, brings this action against the defendants for unlawfully entering upon the same, digging up the soil, etc. The defence is, that the alleged unlawful acts were done under the authority of the proper town supervisors, in and about the working of a highway, which had been duly and legally laid out, and directed to be opened and worked, at the locus in quo.
The proceedings for laying out the highway were had in 1870, under the provisions of Gen. St. c. 13, §§ 33-13, as amended by Laws 1867, c. 30, § é, and Laws 1868, c. 18, § 2. By section 38, the town supervisors are authorized to assess the damages occasioned to any land-owner by the laying out or opening of a road, in case the amount of such damages is not agreed upon. The statute does not require any notice of the assessment to be given to the land-owner, so that he can be heard upon it. Section 39 provides that any person, owner of or agent for any land over which a highway is laid out, feeling himself aggrieved by any order made by the supervisors, may appeal from the same to three county commissioners. Sections 11,12 and 13 provide that the commissioners to whom an appeal is taken shall fix upon a time of meeting to consider the same, at a convenient place at or near the road to be examined; that notice of sueh time and place shall be served by the person making the appeal, upon the supervisors, and upon three of the petitioners for th,e road; that the three commissioners shall meet at the time
It is claimed that the above provisions of section 38 are unconstitutional, because the supervisors represent the town, which is the party treating for the right of way, and they are, therefore, not a properly impartial tribunal. In support of this position Langford v. Com’rs of Ramsey County, 16 Minn. 375, is relied on. That was a case in which certain persons were, by an act of the legislature, appointed commissioners for the special purpose of laying out a certain road and ascertaining and determining the compensation proper to be made for the damages thereby occasioned, and their decision was final. The court, after having laid down the proposition that the owner of land taken for public use has a right to require that an impartial tribunal be provided for the determination of the question of compensation, before which both parties may meet and discuss their claims on equal terms, proceed to say, with regard to the case before it, that “the commissioners to determine the compensation are private citizens, appointed directly by the legislature, without the consent of the persons whose land is taken for the public. No notice of the proceedings before the commissioners is given. The land-owner is not authorized to appear at any stage of the proceedings; * * the proceedings are entirely esparte.” it was accordingly held, that the mode provided by the act referred to for determining the compensation due to a person for the taking of his property, was in contravention of the constitution. It will be obvious, upon a little reflection, that the Langford case is by no means parallel to
The plaintiff’s point, that he was entitled to a jury trial, is disposed of by Ames v. Lake Superior & Mississippi R. Co., 21 Minn. 241, where it is, in effect, held that the constitution does not secure a right of trial by jury in proceedings to take private property for public use, under the eminent domain. The plaintiff’s counsel claims, that prior to the adoption of our state constitution, a right of trial by jury, in cases of this kind, was given by Laws 1857, (Ex. Session,) c. 62, §§ 10-15, and that this right is preserved by section 4, of the bill of rights. A reference to those sections will hardly show that they confer anything which can properly be called a right of trial by jury, since that implies a trial conducted under the direction of some court, and a verdict upon which judgment is rendered; and, besides, Whallon v. Bancroft, 4 Minn. 70
The defendants, upon the trial, offered in evidence an order of the supervisors, laying out the road in question, and also an order of two county commissioners, determining “that the same should be located in accordance with the order of the supervisors,” and also passing upon and determining the question of damages. The evidence thus offered was objected to solely on the ground that the law under which the proceedings detailed in the orders were had, was unconstitutional. What we have before said disposes of this objection. By thus specifying his ground of objection, the plaintiff waived all other grounds of objection to the evidence, thus, in effect, admitting that the evidence offered was, in other respects, competent and admissible.
These considerations dispose of several of the points here made by the plaintiff. The objection which he makes to the sufficiency of the evidence furnished by the orders to show jurisdiction in the commissioners, is disposed of by the recitals found in the orders made by them, which are, in a collateral proceeding like this action, “sufficient prima-facie evidence” of the existence of the jurisdictional facts recited. Cassidy v. Smith, 13 Minn. 129.
Order affirmed.