141 P. 673 | Mont. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
Action in ejectment. The complaint is in the usual form, alleging title and right of possession in plaintiff to certain lands described, and ouster therefrom by the defendant, to plaintiff’s damage, etc. The answer consists of a denial of all the material allegations of the complaint, and matters alleged as affirmative' defenses upon which issue was joined by reply. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence the court granted the defendant a nonsuit and directed judgment in- its favor for the costs of the action. The plaintiff has appealed.
The evidence discloses these facts: Some time prior to September 15, 1908, a number (more than ten) of the residents of defendant county and owners of land therein presented to the board of commissioners of the county a petition asking for the establishment of a new road from the vicinity in which their lands are situated to Dillon, the county seat. The proposed road, as described in the petition, was to extend through the lands of the plaintiff, and thence through adjoining lands owned by Mrs. R. A. Reynolds and others, so as to give the plaintiff an outlet toward Dillon more direct than was furnished by the old road or a new road established on any other line. It was recited that all the owners of lands through which the proposed road would pass consented to its establishment without cost to the county for right of way, except Mrs. Reynolds. It was asked that, upon the establishment of the proposed road, the old road should be abandoned. Mrs. Reynolds also signed the petition but attached, to the consent thus given, certain conditions as to fences, ditches, gates, etc., along the right of way with which the county authorities should comply as compensation for the portion of her lands taken. Upon the presentation of the petition the board appointed viewers, who made their report. The report was approved. An order was thereupon made establishing the road as proposed, upon the condition that the
It appears from other evidence that the work was stopped because the board was of the opinion that the expense of construction was too great. What change, if any, was made does not appear, but there is ground for the inference that the plaintiff can conveniently reach Dillon by traveling another road deviating somewhat from the line of the proposed road after it leaves his lands. About September 28, 1909, the plaintiff notified the board in writing that, unless the new road should be established and the old road closed up within sixty days, he would withdraw his “dedication and offer” to grant the right of way across his lands and “proceed to re-enter said proposed right of way and remove therefrom the fences that had been placed thereon, and to fully recover the use, possession, and enjoyment of said right of way and all thereof. ’ ’ ' After that date some construction work was done, but the extent of it does not appear. On September 7, 1911, the plaintiff presented to the board a claim against the county for the value of the land occupied by the road. On the following day he commenced an action against the county to recover the amount of this claim. This action was subsequently dismissed, and on November 22, 1912, the present action was commenced.
The question whether the court erred in admitting oral evidence as to the conditions upon which the plaintiff joined in the petition, thus supplementing the record of the proceedings had by the board, discussed by counsel in their brief, we do not think it necessary to decide. Conceding that the ruling was correct, and that the evidence establishes beyond question all that plaintiff’s counsel claim, viz., that the county acquired the right of way upon the express condition that the road should be constructed upon the line described in the petition and fenced as stated by plaintiff, the order of nonsuit was nevertheless properly granted. Section 14 of Article III of the Constitution declares: “Private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation having first been made to
The road was opened by the consent of plaintiff. The
It is not meant by anything here said that the plaintiff is wholly without remedy. He may not thus be deprived of his land without full compensation for it. Upon the plainest principles of justice, the board of commissioners should ascertain the amount to which he is entitled and pay him. In the absence of favorable action on its part, he may maintain his action for it as he at first attempted to do. But in face of the provisions of the statute, supra, he cannot destroy the highway established according to law, through the medium of an action in ejectment.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.