67 Vt. 163 | Vt. | 1894
The selectmen of Fair Haven resurveyed a highway under the provisions of s. 2920, R. L., which reads as follows :
“If the survey of a highway has not been properly recorded, or the record preserved, or if its terminations and boundaries cannot be ascertained, the selectmen may resur*165 vey the same, and' make a record thereof in the town clerk’s office ; but fences or buildings erected or continued thereon for more than fifteen years shall not be removed, or the lands enclosed.taken for the highway, without compensation as in other cases of altering highways.”
The petitioner, under No. 15, Acts 1886, took an appeal to the county court, alleging that he was the owner of land included in the resurvey; that it had been enclosed for more than fifteen years, and That no damages had been allowed him for the land so taken; and further alleging that the public good, or the convenience of individuals, did not require a resurvey of said highway. Commissioners were appointed by the county court, who reported that the highway was originally surveyed and laid out April 10, 1788, including in their report an accurate description of the survey, with its termini and courses. The commissioners further reported that the boundary of the highway at one terminus could not be ascertained, nor can it now be ascertained and located with any degree of certainty; that the resurvey of the east line of the highway was not, nor was it intended by the selectmen to be, a reproduction of the old or original survey of the highway at that point. This in substance is all that the commissioners report in relation to the case before them. There are no findings upon the various questions presented by the petition — whether the petitioner was the owner of land included in the resurvey, whether such land, if any, had been enclosed for more than fifteen years, whether the petitioner had sustained damages, and if so, how much, etc. It is not stated in the report why the commissioners did not report fully upon the case before them, but we infer that it was for the reason that having found the lines of the original survey could not be reproduced, nor ascertained and located as they were when first surveyed in 1788, they were of the opinion that the selectmen had no jurisdiction nor legal authority to make a resurvey. This is the view taken by the petitioner’s counsel, who argues that for that reason the
Judgment is reversed and cause remanded.