58 N.H. 127 | N.H. | 1877
I. It is objected to the report, that it does not show the particular circumstances of the alleged changes, nor how they affect the case, as required by the eighty-seventh rule of court. If the report states, with reasonable certainty, the changes that have occurred, and their bearing upon the necessity for the highway, so that the court can see that the commissioners have pursued the tenor of their commission, it will not undertake to revise their conclusions Petition of Hopkinton,
II. The defendants appeared before the commissioners, and were heard. They did not then take this objection. If they had the right to take it then, they waived it by not objecting at the time. Roberts v. Stark,
III. It is said that many persons were damaged by the discontinuance, yet the commissioners assessed no damages. This objection cannot be taken by those who have on interest in it, nor by those as to whom the proceedings have been regular, nor by those who have waived the objection. As to all these, an acceptance of the report would be valid and conclusive. State v. Richmond,
The effect of the statute is, to give to certain land-owners vested rights in the continuation of a highway that has been laid out, that cannot be taken from them by a discontinuance of it except upon the payment of such damages as are occasioned them thereby. The statute makes it the duty of the commissioners to assess the damages in the case of a discontinuance, and they should proceed in substantially the same manner as well land is taken for the laying out of a highway. State v. Reed,
IV. The commissioners should consider, upon the question of the discontinuance, the damages that would be done land-owners thereby; and as the report is to be recommitted, they should find and state specially whether the damages are such as to change their conclusion discontinuing the highway.
V. The town of Auburn were duly notified, but did not appear. They became defaulted, and the ordinary consequences of a default must follow. Manchester's Petition,
Case discharged.
DOE, C. J., did not sit.