101 Me. 538 | Me. | 1906
This is a complaint for the assessment of damages occasioned by raising the grade of the highway in South Thomaston in front of the complainant’s premises. It is brought under the provisions of R. S., eh. 23, sect. 68, and is in the nature of an appeal from the refusal of the selectmen of South Thomaston to allow any damages, upon her application therefor. The statute in question provides that “ wdien a way or street is raised or lowered by a road commissioner or person authorized, to the injury of an owner of adjoining land, he may, within a year, apply in writing to the municipal officers and they shall view such way or street and assess the damages, if any have been occasioned thereby, to be paid by the town, and any person aggrieved by said assessment may have them determined, on complaint to the Supreme Judicial Court.” After alleging various jurisdictional facts not in question here, the complainant further alleges that she made the statutory application to the municipal officers for an assessment of her damages, upon which they made the following endorsement:
“ We, the undersigned, municipal officers, assess no damages on the within application for the reason that upon the facts as they exist there is no liability of the town in the premises, nor any jurisdiction in us to assess damages,” by which decision she alleges that she was aggrieved, and so forth.
The town filed a motion to dismiss, which was overruled, and exceptions were taken. The case has not yet been heard upon the merits, and the complainant urges that the exceptions are prematurely
But as the practice heretofore has not been uniform, and as the parties have fully argued the one point raised by the motion to dismiss, we will briefly consider it. It is this. The town claims that it is shown by the complaint itself that the municipal officers did not make any assessment of damages, or any other decision or decree upon which the complainant can found her complaint or from which she can take a virtual appeal. We think otherwise. If the municipal officers had taken no action upon the complainant’s application for an assessment of damages, the point now taken might have been tenable. But the complaint shows that they did take action, and decided questions both of law and fact. They decided to assess no
We think that the statute in question contemplates that an aggrieved party shall have this remedy by complaint whenever municipal officers shall have acted upon an application, and made a decision thereon. It makes no difference whether they have assessed damages in too small an amount, or whether they have refused to assess any. And in the latter case it makes no difference whether they refused because they thought that no damages were sustained in fact, or that there was no liability in law for damages in fact sustained, or that the facts as they found- them did not bring the application within their jurisdiction. Their decision upon any of these matters is not final. It is reviewable upon complaint by an aggrieved party. The correctness of their decision,— their errors, if any, — will be determined by the court, when the complaint is tried in the regular manner. And so will all other material questions in prosecution or defense.
Exceptions dismissed from the law docltei.