140 P. 446 | Or. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
The transcript shows that on December 7, 1911, the plaintiff and 35 others, who are designated as freeholders residing in the road district where the public highway was to be laid, petitioned the County Court of Tillamook County to locate a county road described as follows:
“Commencing at a point 30 feet south of the S. W. corner of block 5 in Garibaldi, said point being in section 21 T. 1. N., R. 10 W., W. M., as shown on the records of the county clerk of Tillamook County, and running thence in a northwesterly and northeasterly direction, parallel to the right of way of the P. R. & N. Ry. as nearly as possible, using streets of the towns as now platted along the proposed route of said road where possible, and terminating 20 feet north of the N. W. corner of block 23 in Wheeler, said point being in section 2, T. 2 N., R. 10 W., W. M., as shown in the records aforesaid."
The petition was accompanied by an affidavit, which reads:
*135 “State of Oregon,
County of Tillamook—ss.:
“I, F. L. Sappington, being first duly sworn on oath say, that I posted notices (a copy of which is hereto annexed) of the proposed road in the following public places to wit: On Union Fishery Dock at Wheeler, U. S. Post Office at Rockaway, Nelson Co.’s store in Garibaldi, Oregon, and one at the courthouse door in Tillamook City in said county and State of Oregon, thirty days prior to the presentation of petition herein, to wit: On the 26th day of October, 1911, and that all of said petitioners are householders residing in the vicinity of said proposed road in Tillamook County and State of Oregon.
“[Signed] F. L. Sappington.”
And duly verified.
The notice thus referred to was in due form and properly subscribed by all the petitioners. At the time the petition was presented, the County Court made an order as follows:
“Now at this time this matter came on to be heard upon the petition of N. McMillan and others-for a county road, described as follows [setting forth the proposed route and terminal as hereinbefore given] : And it appearing to the satisfaction of the court that the said petition is signed by more than 12 freeholders residing in the road district in which said proposed road is located, and the same being accompanied by proof satisfactory to the court that notice has been given by advertisement in manner provided by law by posting at the place of holding County Court, and also at three public places in the vicinity of said proposed road, more than 30 days previous to the presentation of said petition to the County Court, notifying all persons concerned that application would at this time be made to court for the laying out of such road, said notices each being duly signed by each of said petitioners; and the said petitioner having presented to the court his.bond in the sum of $200, and said bond being found satisfactory, the same is ordered approved*136 by the court. It is further ordered that U. O. Jackson, county surveyor, and Fred Zaddach and F. M. Wakeley, duly qualified freeholders of this county, be and they are hereby appointed as the board of road viewers for the laying out of said road, and they are hereby ordered and directed to meet at the Wheeler mill on the 4th day of January, 1912, at 10 o’clock A. M. near the terminus of said road, or in case of their failure to meet on said day, then five days thereafter, and to survey and view and lay out said road, and to make due report of their proceedings to this court.”
The record of the County Court of March 7, 1913, shows that the report of the board of viewers, “In the Matter of the Petition of N. McMillan and Others for a County Road known as Garibaldi-Wheeler Road,” was read on that day and on the two preceding days, and it was ordered that the report be accepted and the county clerk was directed to record the plat, profile and field notes of the survey. The plaintiff on March 22, 1913, and prior to the next succeeding term of the County Clerk, filed with the clerk written objections to the report of the board of road viewers, giving a description of his land through which the line of the proposed highway was surveyed, stating the area of the premises undertaken to be appropriated thereby, and assenting that he would sustain damages in consequence thereof in the sum of $8,170. The County Court on April 5, 1913, rejected his claim, to review which action these proceedings were instituted and determined, as hereinbefore set forth.
In Sweek v. Jorgensen, 33 Or. 270 (54 Pac. 156), the affidavit of the posting of road notices failed to state that either was put up in a public place, except by inference with respect to one notice, which was posted on the county courthouse door. The order of the County Court in respect thereto was as follows:
“And it further appearing the notice of posting said petition at this time has been fully given, as required by law, for more than 30 days prior thereto, by posting notice thereof, duly signed by more than 12 of the lawful petitioners, in three of the most public places along the line of said proposed road, one of said notices tacked to C. H. Voegtly’s barn, one of said notices tacked to a fence post at or near the east end of said proposed road, and one of said notices on the south side of the old stage barn on the line of the proposed road, and also by posting one of such notices for such period of time at the place of holding court.”
“.This record is quite sufficient, by legal intendment, to show a posting in three public places within the vicinity of the proposed road.”
Further in the opinion it is observed:
“But the journal entry recites the posting of such notices, ‘all of which were in public places within the vicinity of said proposed road, and that these facts were made satisfactorily to appear to the court, ’ thus indicating, in effect, that it is sufficient if it be made satisfactorily to appear to the court that the posting was in public places within the' vicinity of the road by evidence at the hearing otherwise than by affidavit.”
In the case at bar it will be remembered that the County Court made no findings as to where the notices were posted, so that it must be inferred that no proof was offered other than Sappington’s affidavit, which is insufficient in the particulars specified.
The petition for the writ of review states that the report was subscribed by the board of county road viewers December 3, 1912, or 11 months and 26 days after their appointment, and that the report was returned to the County Court March 5, 1913. A term of the County Court for the transaction of the county business is required to be held in Tillamook County on the first Wednesday of each month: Section 2391, L. O. L., as amended February 10, 1911 (Laws 1911, c. 37). The road petitioned for herein probably does not much exceed ten miles in length, and why it should have required one year, three months, and one day to view and survey the proposed route and make and file a report thereof, including a plat and profile of the survey, and to secure an order establishing the highway, is not explained in any manner. As these reports were not filed prior to the first Wednesday in January, 1912, the next regular term of the County Court of that county after the appointment of the board of road viewers, a sense of fair dealing demands that these proceedings should be set aside in order that another petition may be filed, notice thereof be given,
The judgment will therefore be reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to set aside all proceedings undertaken to establish the county road.
Reversed.