135 Mo. 471 | Mo. | 1896
This is an appeal from the judgment of the circuit court of Harrison county, affirming a judgment of the county court of said county, affirming the jomt action of the township boards of Bethany and Jefferson townships in establishing a public road along a part of the line dividing said townships. The respondents were the petitioners for said road and a strip of the land of defendant was condemned therefor and his damages assessed at $20.
The cause has been certified to this court by the Kansas City court of appeals, because the question of condemnation of real estate vests the jurisdiction to hear the appeal in this court. State ex rel. v. Rombauer, 124 Mo. 598. It is admitted that Harrison county is organized under the township organization law of this state. '
The petition stated every jurisdictional fact necessary to the establishment of a public road, and was signed by the requisite number of petitioners, residing within three miles of said proposed road.
The record discloses’ that due notice was given of the intended application by the posting of true copies of the petition in each of said townships, Bethany and Jefferson, in three of the most public places in each of said townships, for more than twenty days before the second day of December, 1891. It further appears by the rebord that in pursuance of said notices the two township boards of the townships of Bethany and Jefferson, met at the office of the township clerk of Bethany township in said county and state on the third day
It further appears that there were present at said meeting, Wiley Milligan, member of the Jefferson township board, H. S. Bartlett, trustee, and John T. Hendren, clerk of said Jefferson township, J. R. Cunningham and Richard Lovelace, members of said Bethany township board, J. G. Walker, trustee, and J. W.. Kenyon, clerk pro tem., of Bethany township. At said meeting said board was organized by electing J. R. Cunningham president of the joint board.
The petition was publicly read before the joint board, proof of notice made, and thereupon Hugh Lynch, the appellant, and others, filed a remonstrance. The matter was heard, the road found to be of public utility and practicability and the road commissioner ordered to survey and make his report. This he did in due time, reporting that Hugh Lynch alone refused to relinquish the right of way over a strip eighty rods long and forty feet wide, and off of the south side of the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 32, township 64, range 28, and the north side of the west half of lot number 2 of northwest quarter of section 5, township 63, range 28. Commissioners were duly appointed to assess his damages and made report that they assessed his damages at $20. The report was approved and the road ordered established and opened upon the payment by petitioners of the damages.
Lynch appealed from this order to the county court. In the county court he moved to dismiss the proceedings, but the grounds of his motion nowhere appear in the record. His motion was overruled.
Thereupon, both parties appearing, a hearing was had before the county court of Harrison county'on November 16, 1892, and the action and judgment of the
Thereupon said Lynch appealed from said judgment of the county court to the circuit court of said county, and the cause was reached on the thirteenth day of October, 1893, both parties appearing, and said Lynch filed the following motion:
“In the matter of the petition of George Nickerson et al., for a new road; Hugh Lynch et al., remonstrators and appellants.
“Come now the appellants herein and move the court to dismiss the petition and set aside the proceedings in the matter of the petition of George Nickerson et al, for a new road, for the following reasons, to wit.:
“1. Because there is no finding in the record that the petitioners for said new road could not agree with’ the owners of the land over which it passed as to the amount of damages said owners,had sustained, nor do the proceedings show that any attempt was made by said petitioners and the landowners to agree as to the amount of damages said landowners had sustained.
“2. Because the record does not show that a majority of all the directors of the two townships concurred in the order establishing said road. •
“3. Because the whole record establishing said road is indefinite and insufficient,” which motion was by the court overruled and said Lynch duly excepted.
Afterward, on said day, said cause coming on for final hearing, the said Lynch offered to prove and tendered evidence to prove the amount of damages sustained by him by the laying out and establishing said road and to show they were greater than allowed him by the commissioners and the county court, to the introduction of which evidence the petitioners objected
The circuit court approved the action of the county court and thereupon said Lynch filed his motion for a new trial in the following words:
“1. Because the court erred in excluding testimony offered by defendant as to the amount of damages sustained by him by opening said road, and in admitting improper testimony for plaintiffs.
“2. Because the court erred in overruling defendant’s motion to dismiss this suit.
“3. Because the joint township board had no jurisdiction.
“4. Because under the law the finding and judgment should have been for the defendant.
“5. Because the facts which confer jurisdiction to appoint commissioners to assess the damages are not shown by the record.”
Which said motion was on said last mentioned date taken up and considered by the court and by the court overruled.
To the action of the court in overruling the defendant’s motion for a new trial the defendant at the time excepted.
And on said last mentioned date defendant filed his motion in arrest of judgment, which motion is in words and figures as follows, to wit:
‘ ‘Comes now the defendant and moves the court to arrest the judgment in this cause for the following reasons:
“1st. Because on the face of the record the judgment is erroneous, and for the wrong party.
*479 *^nd. Because this court, nor the township board,' has no jurisdiction of this defendant, or of the subject-matter of this controversy.”
"Which was by the court overruled, and said Lynch duly excepted, and thereupon said Lynch appealed from said judgment of the circuit court.
I. By section 8554, Revised Statutes, 1889, it is provided, that public roads may be established on township lines in the same manner as other public roads, except that in such case the petition shall be presented to the board of directors of each township interested, the petition and notice to be as in other cases and signed by not less than twelve householders residing in either township within three miles of said road, whereupon it is made the duty of the township boards of the several townships to be affected thereby to meet and act as one body in the same time and manner as in other cases in considering the petition, ordering a survey and report, appointment of commissioners to assess damages, and making all orders, and a majority of all such directors must concur in all such orders and an appeal is allowed as in other cases to the county court.
In this case the petition fully complied with the law; notices were duly posted for more than twenty days, before the meeting of the two township boards, in three public places in each township. Said petition was presented to each board on December 2, 1891, and thereupon it was ordered that the two boards meet the next day as a joint board and accordingly they met on the third day of December, 1891.
There is no merit whatever in the point made that the joint township board was not duly organized. All the members of the two boards, as constituted by law, were present and one of their members elected president. It appears, moreover, that the petition was filed and proof of notice was made to each board sep
II. As to the contention that the record does not show that the petitioners for the road, and Lynch, had endeavored to agree on his compensation and had failed, it 'is sufficient to say that the county court had before it evidence that the records of the township boards as originally written contained a finding that ‘ ‘the petitioners and the owners failed to ágree, ” but'that someone had attempted to erase it but it was still visible on the records of the townships. The county court had this evidence before it and having found against appellant on his objection on this ground, it must be presumed in favor of official action that the court found that this essential had been observed and that the true record showed that fact, and we are not disposed to question the correctness of its decision, as there was ample evidence to sustain its finding.
III. The remaining point is that the circuit court erred in refusing to hear evidence as to the amount of appellant Lynch’s damages.
This point must be resolved by reference to the law governing appeals prosecuted under our statute regulating counties under township organization. By section 8556, Revised Statutes, 1889, it is provided that in all appeals from the judgment or orders of township boards “the county court shall, at their first regular meeting thereafter, proceed to hear and determine all matters of dispute in said proceedings, and shall malee an order in said cause, which shall be final as to all matters involved in said proceedings, saving to all landowners through whose land said road may run, and who may not have given the right of way, the right to
It will be seen that the right of appeal from the county court is confined “to questions of law involving the legality of said proceedings;” that is to say, errors in the record proper.
A question of law alone, it would seem, authorizes an appeal to the circuit court and it sits as a court for the correction of errors of law in such cases, and the illegality must have occurred in the proceedings prior to reaching the circuit court, otherwise there is no ground for an appeal under this statute. Does the appellant’s offer to prove the amount of his damages anew in the circuit court in any manner involve the legality of the former proceedings?
The record does not disclose any exception or alleged error in the manner of estimating his damages by the commissioners or in the county court, or any misdirection as to the measure thereof prior to the case reaching the circuit court, and there is no provision in the law for saving or certifying exceptions from a county court to the circuit court.
It was simply an offer to prove anew what had already been proven in the tribunals appointed by 'law to superintend that inquiry. We do not think the appellate jurisdiction of the circuit court authorized it to ascertain the amount, of damages denovo. We are confirmed in this view by the history of the legislation on this subject.
In the revision of 1879, it was provided that “thé action of the county court as to the laying out, change or vacation of public roads, and questions as to damages shall be final, saving the right of appeal as hereinbefore
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.