46 Wash. 642 | Wash. | 1907
This action was brought to enjoin the city of Georgetown from taking a strip of land, fifteen feet wide, from respondent’s property for street purposes. The trial court decreed five feet of the land in dispute to the appellant as a public highway, but enjoined the appellant from taking the remaining ten feet. The city appeals from that part of the decree which restrains it from using the ten feet of respondent’s property for highway purposes.
The appellant contends that the petition requesting the county commissioners to fix the width of the road at thirty feet, and the order of the commissioners fixing the width thereof at forty feet, were void because no notice was given. It is conceded that proper notice of the relocation of the road was given as required by law, and that the petition was silent as to the width of the road. The statute then in force provided that “all county roads shall be sixty feet in width, unless the county commissioners shall, upon the prayer of the petitioners for the same, determine on a less number of feet in width.” Code of 1881, § 2979. Under this statute, where no width was fixed by order of the board of county commissioners, the statute fixed the width at sixty feet. Sumner v. Peebles, 5 Wash. 471, 32 Pac. 221, 1000.
Under the petition for relocation, the board of county commissioners had jurisdiction to fix the width at sixty feet. The board also had jurisdiction to fix the width at less than sixty feet, upon the prayer of the petitioners. While the record in this case does not show that the petitioners who asked to have the width fixed at thirty feet were all of the original petitioners, it does show that they were interested in the road, and no objections appear to have been made to the order as made by the county commissioners. Since the board of county commissioners had jurisdiction to act upon the petition and to grant the whole of the sixty feet, we are of the opinion that the board had power to fix the width of the road at any number of feet less than sixty, upon the prayer or request of any of the petitioners at the hearing. The statute did not require the petition or notice to state the width of the proposed road, but to state only “the place of beginning, the intermediate points, if any, and the place of termination of said road.” Code-of 1881, § 2971. A new notice, therefore,
We are also of the opinion that the board of county commissioners were not bound by the prayer of the petitioners. The board having acquired jurisdiction to establish or locate the road, might use their own judgment and fix the road at such width less than sixty feet as the circumstances and facts seemed to warrant. This being so, it follows that the road laid out in 1863 was altered by the relocation of the same road in 1879, so that thereafter the road was only forty feet in width. The appellant was, therefore, not authorized to take the property of the respondent more than twenty feet from the center line of the road. The fact that the respondent, signed the petition to the city council to open a road sixty feet in width in front of her property, did not of itself grant the city the right to take any part of respondent’s property without compensation.
The judgment of the trial court appears to be right, and is therefore affirmed.
Hadley, C. J., Root, Crow, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.