15 Gratt. 244 | Va. | 1859
That the evidence offered by the defence in this case might be received under the general issue, if itself free from objection, is very clear. It has long been settled that the defendant under this issue may prove that the locus in quo was his own freehold or that of another by whose authority he entered, or that he hath any other title or right to the possession. Diersly and, Nevel's Case, 1 Leon. R. 301; Dodd v. Kyffin, 7 T. R. 354; Garr, &c. v. Fletcher, 2 Stark. R. 71, 3 Eng. C. L. R. 250; Chambers v. Donaldson, 11 East’s R. 65, 72; Argent v. Durrant, 8 T. R. 403, Gilb. Ev. 258.
The objection to the evidence offered, to prove that Cochran was the superintendent of the road referred to, is I think, wholly untenable. In general it is not necessary to prove the written appointments of public officers. That one has acted as such officer and been recognized by the public as such, is sufficient evidence that he had been duly appointed until the contrary appears; nor is it material how the question arises, whether in a civil or a criminal case, nor whether the officer is a party or his official character is involved in-«dentally, unless where, being plaintiff, he unnecessarily avers his title to the office or the mode of his appointment; in which case, perhaps, the proof must sustain the entire averment. McGahey v. Alston, 2 Mees. & Welsb. 206; Berryman v. Wise, 4 T. R. 366; Cannell v. Curtis, 2 Bing. N. C. 228 (29 Eng. C. L. R. 316); The King v. Gordon, 2 Leach’s C. C. 15; 1 Greenl. Ev. § 83, 92, and cases cited in nn. Still stronger is the case where, as in this, the acts and official character were fully recognized by the appointing power.
Nor can the objection to the plat and profile of road offered in evidence be sustained. It is true there was
By the “plat of the land” to be occupied by the road required to be returned to the clerk’s office by § 5, of ch. 70, of the Code (p. 349), I understand the same thing that is called a “ plat or map of the road” in section 4th of the act concerning the Northwestern turnpike road, and I regard the profile in this case if not as perfect as it might have been made, yet as substantially complying with the requirement of the act. And having been returned to the clerk’s office by Cochran, the superintendent whose duty from the nature of his office it was to cause the plat and profile to be made and so returned, the authorization of his act is sufficiently implied, and it must be taken to be
I think these grounds of objection to the profile as evidence were clearly insufficient, and I pass on to consider the effect of the survey and the return of the profile to the clerk’s office in their bearing on the case, in connection with the first instruction asked for by the plaintiff and that which the court gave instead, when it refused it.
It may be inferred from what we see in the record that the Board of public works, under the act of March 22, 1853, had progressed with the work of the road from Marland’s Bottom to Lewisburg and had completed the same as far as a place called Oakland ; that at that point for some cause which it may not be difficult to conjecture, work upon the road had been suspended, and that it was determined to appeal to the public spirit of the people in the section interested for the means of prosecuting this work deemed of public utility, to its completion. For at the next session of the general assembly, an act was passed (Sess. Acts 1855-6, ch. 198, p. 139) providing for the incorporation of a company to be called the “ Oakland and Lewisburg company, for the purpose of continuing the Marland’s Bottom and Lewisburg turnpike from Oakland its then southern terminus to Lewis-burg. By the second section of this act, the company was required to construct the road of the same width and grade as those of the Lewisburg and Marland’s Bottom turnpike, and upon the location determined by the Board of public works, plainly referring to the location which had been made under the act of the 22d of March 1853 for the extension of the Huttonsville and Huntersville road from Marland’s Bottom to Lewisburg. How I can perceive no reason why the legislature might not authorize this company to construct the road upon the ground which had in fact
But it is said the enterprise of constructing a road from Marland’s Bottom to Lewisburg was abandoned by the legislature, and that finding it so the plaintiff may for those reasons have failed to file her petition and claim compensation for her land. Where land has been appropriated for a public work and the legislature afterwards by indubitable evidences manifests its intention to abandon the enterprise and the interest of the state, if a qualified estate only, has ceased and determined, I certainly will not undertake to affirm that a company incorporated at a subsequent period to construct such a work could claim to occupy the ground formerly appropriated by the state without making such compensation; but in this case there is no evidence of any such abandonment. That the Board of public works had not been able for whatever cause to complete the road to Lewisburg within one year after the filing of the profile in the clerk’s office was certainly not sufficient to justify her in concluding that the enterprise was abandoned and induce her to forbear preferring her claim for compensation, if she otherwise would have done so within the year. That the enterprise was abandoned after the road had been made as far as Oakland because the work was suspended, whether before or after the expiration of the year and whether because money could not be raised or thfe appropriation had been exhausted, was by no means the necessary nor the proper inference. The Board of public works had not the power to declare the enterprise abandoned and surrender the commonwealth’s interest in the location. The legislature hav
Whether the plaintiff preferred her claim and obtained compensation for the land occupied by the road after the profile had been filed, we are not informed. If she did prefer it and received such compensation, surely she cannot be entitled to demand it a second time. If because she thought the peculiar benefits which she would derive in respect to the residue of her land would be full compensation and did not care to risk costs in seeking more, or whether with a commendable public spirit she chose to waive her claim, she must after the expiration of the year stand on the same footing as if she had received all that she was entitled to.
I think therefore the court properly refused to give the first instruction .asked for, and that the instruction which it gave in lieu of it was substantially correct. But I think’ it erred in refusing to give the third instruction and in giving that which it did give, instead, understanding both as referring to the peculiar benefits which the party would derive in respect to the residue of her land by the construction of the road on the new location. If the company desired to change thé location and had the right to do so, it was their duty to conform to the provision of the Code, ch. 56, § 21, p. 296. If they failed to do this, and departed from the location, they became trespassers, and when sued,
Daniel, Moncure and Robertson, Js. concurred in the opinion of Lee, J.
Allen, P. was of opinion that the Lewisburg and Oakland turnpike company were not authorized to occupy the location that had been made by the Board of public works without compensation to the land owners. He concurred in the opinion of Lee, J* on the other points.
Judgment reversed.