119 Mo. App. 251 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
This proceeding is an application to the county court of Lafayette county to turn a public road where it runs through the petitioner’s land to another part of his land. Thex’e was a remonstrance of twelve freeholders. The petition was referred to the road commissioner who made his report thereon. After-wards the county court made an order turning the road as asked and the remonstrants appealed to the circuit court. In the latter court the appeal was dismissed on the ground that no appeal would lie in such case. The remonstrants thereupon brought the case here.
The proceeding is based upon the following statute (section 9447, Revised Statutes 1899) : “Any person wishing to cultivate or enclose land through which any
The sole question presented by counsel is the right of appeal. If the right exists at all it must be founded upon the statute. We decided a case under this statute, brought here on appeal, but the question of a right to appeal was neither presented- nor considered. [Self v. Gowin, 80 Mo. App. 398.] The right of appeal was denied to less than twelve remonstrants in Schroeder v. Jabin, 94 Mo. App. 111, but it was not decided whether tAvelve would have had the right.
A careful examination of the question has satisfied us that the circuit court took the correct view of the law in deciding that there was no right of appeal from the county court. There are seA^era! sound reasons sustaining that view. As before remarked the right of appeal must be based on the statute. Exclusive original power is given to the county court in road matters and formerly the right of appeal, practically, did not exist as such appeal amounted to no more than a certiorari. There was no trial anew in the circuit court and if the county court had followed the forms of law, its decision was final. A statute, however, has been interposed enlarging the right of appeal in certain cases and pro
Applying this rule to the present case, Ave find that proceedings of this nature are based upon a special provision of the road laAv, which we have set out above. In that provision there is no right of appeal granted, nor is there any provision for any further hearing beyond the county court. The Legislature has provided for appeals in road cases and for trials anew in the circuit court in certain cases. [Section 9419, Revised Statutes 1899, viz., Avhere damages are assessed, or a road is opened, changed or vacated.] But clearly, those specifications of the right of appeal contemplate cases Avhere there may be contesting parties, not cases in which no provision is made for such contests. Thus section 9416, provides for a remonstrance and contest over the establishing of neAV roads, or changing existing roads, and section 9448 provides for the same thing in the vacation of roads already established. But the statute upon which this proceeding is had, is not to change a road, or to vacate a road, in the sense used in section 9419, providing for appeals, and the other sections providing for contests by remonstrants. The purpose of the statute upon which this proceeding is based is to “turn” a road from one part of a man’s land to another and no remonstrance is contemplated and no remonstrants are recognized as contestants, since no provision is made for either. It is plainly a special, separate and independent provision appearing in the road law for the benefit of the individual landoAvner, Avho must make the change himself and at his OAvn expense. He is only required to obtain the consent of the county court. And to the’ end that that court may be properly advised as to the truth
It seems to us that the question has been directly passed upon by the Supreme Court. The case of Over-beck v. Galloway, 10 Mo. 364 (approved in Foster v. Dunklin, 44 Mo. 216), was, like this, an application for permission to turn a public road from one part of Over-beck’s land to another. Galloway came into the county court and undertook to have himself made an adversary party. The court said that “In the establishment of new roads, or the changing of roads already established, or the vacation of existing roads, wherever it is probable that individual or private rights will be affected, the statute provides for the making of such individual parties by summoning them to appear and show cause if any they have or can, why the prayer of the petitioners should not be granted. But where, as in this case, a change in the road is desired for cultivation, and the change is upon the land of the petitioner, and the objection to the change is based upon the supposed injury to the public convenience, the statute does not prescribe any method by which that interest may be protected against the unwise or injudicious action of the county court.” The statute of 1845, article 1, chapter 151, under which that case was decided, is practically iden
But the parties appealing in this case, have not only charged in their remonstrance that to turn the road as proposed, would injuriously affect the public interest, but that it would also particularly damage them, in that it is their only road leading to Lexington, which is their post office and place of market, as well as railway station ; and that if the road is turned as proposed, it will be “a heavier graded and rougher piece of road” over which they will be compelled to travel in going to Lexington, and that, in consequence, their lands will be damaged ten dollars per acre.
There are two reasons why such objections cannot be allowed to be of any controlling force in disposing of the question before us. First, the statute, upon which this proceeding is founded does not authorize an inquiry whether private interests will be affected. The statute reads that if “the court be satisfied that the public will not be materially injured” it shall order the change, and “upon satisfactory proof of such road being opened in such manner as to be equally convenient to travelers,” it shall close the old road. Thus leaving out of view any supposed inconvenience to particular! individuals.
Second, the Supreme Court has decided in Overbeck v. Galloway, supra, that the special injury claimed by the parties appealing this case, does not disclose the kind of private interest, as distinguished from the interest of the general public, as entitles them to an appeal. The court adopts the following language used by the Supreme Court of Kentucky in Cole v. Shannon, 1 J. J. Marsh 218, an analogous case, where the owner of land objected to the discontinuance of a road through his land by the county court, viz., “The interest which
“The road may be very advantageous to him, and furnish facilities which may greatly enhance the value of his land; so may the contiguity or proximity of a highway, or bridge, or ferry to the land of an individual, increase the value of the land, and therefore its discontinuance may subject him to inconvenience and loss. His interest in the road, or bridge, or ferry, would be greater in quantity than that of an individual who owned no lands; so one who makes frequent use of a privilege granted to the public, may be considered as possessing a greater degree of interest than another, who, although he has an equal right, does not make the same, or any use of his privilege.
“In all these cases, the interest of all the persons who have been designated, would be the same in kind, although very different in degree. Any one or none of them, therefore; may complain to this court. It is admitted that no one who owns no land through which the road runs, can complain, hence, Cole and O’Harra cannot appeal in this case. The road did not belong to them. They had no franchise in it. They had no other right to it than that which was common to all others.”
An individual, through whose land a road may have been established, may prosecute a writ of error to reverse the order establishing it, because by its establishment, he is deprived of the use of the land over which
And so we held in Aldridge v. Spears, 40 Mo. App. 527 (s. c., 101 Mo. 400) that among other reasons why petitioners could not appeal from an order of the county court refusing to open a new road, was they had no such special interest, as distinguished from the general public, as would entitle them to an appeal.
There are, however, two sections of the statute referring generally to appeals, which are invoked here. One is section 1674, Revised Statutes 1899, giving to circuit courts appellate jurisdiction of all orders and judgments of county courts; and the other is section 1788, Revised Statutes 1899, providing that on all appeals from the county court to the circuit court the latter shall try the case anew. But these sections do not abate the force of what we have just written as to the right of a party to appeal. Section 1674 does not give
We may add another suggestion in support of the ruling of the trial court. In the present proceedings the county court did not act in its judicial capacity and it is only from proceedings in their nature judicial that an appeal may be had. [Aldridge v. Spears, 101 Mo. 400; s. c., 40 Mo. App. 527.] The property, of neither of the parties claiming a right to this appeal has been taken. The necessity, all things considered, for a turn of a road from one part of a petitioning owner’s land to another part of his land has been left to* the administrative care of the county court (Aldridge v. Spears, supra; Scott County v. Leftwich, 145 Mo. 26; St. Louis Ry. Co. v. St. Louis, 92 Mo. 160), in which instance there is no appeal.
We have examined the cases referred to by appellants not before noticed, but find them without applica.tion. The statute upon which King’s Lake District v. Jamison, 176 Mo. 557, was decided provided for a contest between the parties as Avell as for an appeal. The statute considered in that case contains the essentials which we have shoAvn do not appear in the statute under consideration here. And the same may be said of the case of In re Big Hollow Road, 111 Mo. 326. As already stated, the only thing decided by the St. Louis Court of Appeals in Schroeder v. Jabin, 94 Mo. App. Ill, was that less than twelve objectors could not appeal a proceeding brought under this statute. It is true that in a course of reasoning in the opinion it is suggested that there might be a remonstrance under the statute now considered. But the court said (italics, ours) that “No provision for a remonstrance being made by section 9447, upon which this proceeding is founded, and the whole matter of highways being regulated by statutes, none is authorized unless the authority is derived by construction from section 9416; but if found
The judgment will be affirmed.