delivered the opinion of the Court:
This record presents but one question, and that is whether appellant is estopped from calling in question the validity and legality of the road. If he is, we apprehend the fact will not be contended that the commissioners of highways were justified in removing the obstructions placed by appellant in the road. After the highway was laid out, appellant accepted the damages which had been awarded him by the commissioners, removed his fences, and the land over which the road was laid was appropriated to the public use. For a period of about five years, from 1868 until 1873, the road was worked by the proper authorities, traveled, and in all respects treated by the property owners along the line, the road authorities and the public, as a legal highway. Under such circumstances, what is the law that should control the case?
In Town v. Town of Blackberry,
In the case of Rees v. The City of Chicago,
In Kile v. Town of Yellowhead,
The cases cited would seem to be conclusive of the question presented. The damages allowed appellant were awarded in payment for that portion of the land taken, and when he received the money, and delivered the possession of the land to the commissioners of highways for the use of the public, we are aware of no principle of law which would permit him to retain the money received for damages and regain the possession of the land, on account of some illegality in the proceedings. He parted with his property, or at least the use of it, for a valuable consideration, which he voluntarily accepted, and whether the proceedings of the commissioners are legal or illegal, he can not call them in question. It may be true that the road was not laid out in all respects in conformity to the requirements of the statute, and that a person interested, who had not received the damages awarded him, might call in question the validity of the highway, but the appellant does not occupy that position. The acceptance of the damages allowed for his land must be regarded as a waiver of whatever errors may have existed in the proceedings. Morgan v. Ladd,
It is true, the assessment of damages by the commissioners in appellant’s favor, of itself would not create an estoppel. He was under no obligation to accept the amount allowed him, and had he refused to do so, then he would have been in a position to insist that the proceedings were illegal or void; but when he voluntarily accepted the sum of $175, which the commissioners allowed him as damages in payment for the land or its use, which was taken for the highway, and the commissioners, relying upon his acquiescence in the proceedings, opened the road, and spent the public money in improving it for public use, he can not now be heard to call in question the validity of these proceedings, which, by his assent, he admitted to be binding and legal. When appellant accepted the damages allowed in his favor, the commissioners of highways had a clear right to rely upon his acquiescence, and it is now too late for him to undertake to question a public road which was opened and devoted to the use of the public on the faith of his acts and assent.
The judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
