27 Ind. 233 | Ind. | 1866
Suit by Mossman, the appellant, .against Forrest, for trespass upon the plaintiff’s land. Issues were
The third paragraph of the defendant’s answer justified the entry upon the plaintiff’s land by alleging that the locus in quo was a public highway, duly located and established, and ordered to be opened by the board of commissioners of Whitley county; that as supervisor of the road district in which the plaintiff’s land was situated, and over which said public highway was located, he entered upon the land on said highway for the purpose of opening the same, &c„, jvhich was the trespass complained of. A copy of the record- of the proceedings of the county commissioners, establishing the highway, was made a part of the answer. A demurrer to the paragraph was overruled, to which the plaintiff excepted. On the trial of the cause, the court, over the plaintiff’s objection, permitted the defendant to read in evidence the record of the proceedings of the board of commissioners, establishing the highway.
It is insisted by the appellant’s counsel that the proceedings of the commissioners, establishing the highway, are void for uncertainty, and that the Court of Common Pleas therefore erred in overruling the demurrer to the third paragraph of the answer', and in permitting said proceedings to be given in evidence on the trial. "Were the proceedings establishing the highway void ? This is the only question in the case. The objections urged to the proceedings are, that the viewers appointed by the board of commissioners to view and locate the highway, though they reported the same to be of public utility, did not give a sufficient description of the commencement and terminus of the road; and that they did not report the course-or distance thereof, as required by the statute. It appears by the record of the board of commissioners, that a petition was filed asking for the location of a highway “in township 31, range 10 east, commencing at the quarter post between sections 9 and 10, on the land' of Stephen H. Clark, and ranning south, through the lands of Stephen H. Clark and Francis Mossman, to tire
It is conceded that when statutory powers are conferred 'upon a court of inferior jurisdiction, and a mode of executing those powers is prescribed, the course pointed out must be substantially pursued, or the acts and judgments of the court are coram non juclice and void. White v. Conover, 5 Blackf. 462. In the case at bar the viewers did not, in terms, state in their report the course and distance of the proposed highway; but in the petition for the highway the course and distance are clearly stated, and all the subsequent proceedings refer to the proposed highway as de- . scribed in the petition. Besides, the report of the viewers, following the petition, states the commencing point as being the quarter post between sections 9 and 10 and terminating at the quarter post between sections 15 and 16. The
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.