29 P. 1089 | Idaho | 1892
On or before the fifteenth day of July, 1890, a petition in due form was presented to the board of county commissioners of Latah county, praying for the establishment of a private or by-road over the lands belonging to the defendant, E. G. Peterson, described in plaintiffs complaint. On said fifteenth day of July, the board of county commissioners appointed three viewers, and directed that said viewers should meet on the fifth day of September, 1890, and view and survey and mark out said road, and estimate the damages accruing to nonconsenting land owners. The said viewers met as directed; surveyed and marked out the road; platted and mapped the same; made their report to said board, which thereupon ordered the road overseer to tender to defendant, who was a nonconsenting land owner, the sum of money awarded to him^ which sum the defendant refused to accept. Thereupon this suit was commenced. The cause was tried before the Honorable W. G. Piper, judge, and a jury. The jury assessed the damages accruing to defendant at $100. Judgment of condemnation was thereupon entered. Defendant appealed from said judgment to this court. The principal contention of the appellant is that the act of the territorial legislature, to wit, section 933 of the Revised Statutes of Idaho, is unconstitutional, for the reason that it attempts to take private property for private use. It is a general rule that the right of eminent
In Nesbitt v. Trumbo, 39 Ill. 110, 89 Am. Dec. 290, and Crear v. Crossly, 40 Ill. 175, the court hold that section 93 of the act of 1861 (Ill. Stats., p. 263) is unconstitutional, for the reason that it transfers the use of the land condemned to the person for whose use the road was established, his heirs and assigns, forever. The owner is deprived of its use, and the other acquires its use perpetually. For all practicable purposes, this amounts to a transfer of the land. It will be seen that this statute is very different from section 933 of the Revised Statutes of Idaho. The owner of the soil and the general public has as much interest in and the right to the use of such private road, as fully and completely, as the person upon whose application it is opened; and the effect would be that, if the use of the land for such purpose should cease, it would revert to the owner of the soil. In the two last-named eases Mr. Justice Lawrence, one of the most eminent jurists of his time, dissents from the opinion of the court, and giving his reasons, in Crear v. Crossly, he says: “If the government, after making a grant, owns all the surrounding lands, the grantee takes a right of way over the surrounding land to the public highway as an incident to his grant; and if the government retains the title to a tract of land, having sold the land surrounding it on every side, a right of way to a public road is reserved by implication. This right of way continues in both cases, both in favor of and against subsequent grantees, for it is a right created by operation of law, and from necessity, to enable owners to enjoy their lands. I consider our statute in regard to private roads as simply based on this common-law right, and regulating its exercise. The right existed before the act was passed, by the established rules of the common law in
The appellant complains that the decree of the court authorizes the condemnation of a strip of land only thirty feet
The appellant also makes the point that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. We think this point cannot be sustained. The ultimate facts only are necessary to be alleged, and these are sufficiently set forth. The respondent in this case complains that the court below rendered a judgment in form against P. N. Lunstrum for the amount of the damages and one-half the costs, while it is undoubtedly true that no judgment can be rendered against one not a party to the suit. As neither the respondent, the county of Latah, nor Lunstrum, nor Peterson has taken any appeal from this part of the judgment, it is not before this court. The condemnation is made substantially upon condition that said Lunstrum shall pay the defendant, Peterson, the damages and one-half the costs (into court), and, upon such payment or tender, the decree can be enforced. Judgment affirmed.