122 Minn. 134 | Minn. | 1913
Albin Johnson owns the southerly portion of section 20 — 3L-20, town of Chisago Lake, Chisago county. Berndt L. Hanson owns the adjoining land in the section to the .south. The east line of both is the east section line. Their buildings are about half a mile west of this section line. Johnson petitioned the town board under section 1373, E. L. 1905, as amended by chapter 217, p. 292, Laws 1911, to lay out a road two rods wide over the land of Hanson to connect with a public highway to the south. The town board denied this petition. Johnson appealed to the district court. The case was tried before a jury. The jury returned a verdict reversing the action of the town board and finding that the proposed road be laid out as prayed for in the petition of Albin Johnson. The town óf Chisago Lake and Hanson appeal from an order denying a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial.
The-amended statute above cited reads as follows:
* * * “Town boards are required to establish a road at least two rods wide connecting with a public road any tract of land of five acres or more owned by a person who has no access thereto except over*136 land of others, npon the petition of such owner alone; the damages, if any, to be paid by him before such road is opened.”
A large number of errors are assigned. Two of the assignments are well taken.
The error in the charge lay in the fact that it entirely eliminated the question as to whether this proposed route was the proper location for a road, and instructed the jury in effect that the location rested absolutely on Johnson’s choice. The statute does not bear any such construction. The statute gives him a right under the conditions such as then existed to petition for a road and it requires the town board to grant him one. But this does not mean that the location depends on the petitioner’s arbitrary choice. The propriety of the location of the road is a matter for the determination of the town board. The board in acting on such petition may exercise a reasonable discretion in varying the route proposed as public interests may require, provided they adhere to the point of beginning, the general course, and the termination. State v. Thompson, 46 Minn. 302, 48 N. W. 1111. If the route named in the petition is not a proper
This proposed road runs between Hanson’s house and his barn and within less than a rod from his barn door. It cuts 'his farm in two. Members of the town board testified that they denied the petition for the reason that they thought there were other ways out; that they considered the proper place for such a road on the section line which formed the east line of both Hanson and Johnson; that they considered the proposed road the worst possible place, and that they considered the damage too great to justify the laying out of a road there. One witness testified that, if he owned the Hanson land, a road in that location could not be bought for any money.
These were matters proper for the board to consider and they were also matters proper for the jury to consider. The charge excluded all such matters from consideration of the jury.
The court was not trying the academic question whether the town board correctly resolved the questions presented to it. It should not grant a way of necessity, if the the necessity has ceased to exist, even though it has ceased to exist by reason of facts occurring after the action of the town board. The statute
Order reversed and new trial granted.
[R. L. 1905, § 1189.]