115 Me. 154 | Me. | 1916
By chapter 166 of the Private and Special Laws of 1915, the plaintiff district, which includes that part of Rumford known as the Rumford Village Corporation, and certain described territory in Mexico, was incorporated as a public municipal corporation for the purpose of acquiring by the exercise of the right of eminent domain, or by purchase, the toll bridge, approaches and
By section 5 of the Act, the district was authorized to buy, and the company to sell, the bridge property. The district was also authorized to acquire the property .by the exercise of the right of eminent domain. If the parties should agree upon the terms of purchase, no further statutory proceedings were necessary. But if not, the procedure for acquiring the property was prescribed by section 6. That section provided that in case the parties failed to agree upon the terms of purchase, the district might take the property “by petition therefor to the county commissioners of Oxford county wherein said company and its mortgagees shall be parties defendant.” The parties did not agree upon terms of purchase, and the district filed its petition to the county commissioners, as provided by section 6, and thereby took the bridge property. And the proceedings so far, since, have been under section 6. This the record clearly shows.
Section 6 further provided that: “Such petition shall not be dismissed after filing, but may and shall be amended in any manner required to enable the court to make all necessary decrees thereon. The county commissioners of Oxford county shall, after due notice and hearing, fix the valuation of said toll bridge, approaches, toll house and franchises of said defendant company at what they are fairly and equitably worth. . . . The report of the commissioners of Oxford county shall be filed in the clerk’s office for the county of Oxford within three months after their hearing and determination. After said report is so filed, any single Justice of the supreme judicial court, either in term time or vacation, after notice and hearing, may confirm or reject said report, or recommit
The county commissioners assessed the damages on February 15, 1916, and filed their report in the office of the clerk of the supreme judicial court for Oxford county. At the following March term of that court, the defendant filed a motion to dismiss the report for three reasons, namely:- — -First, because the Act is unconstitutional and void; secondly, because the Act never became operative, inasmuch as that section of the district, known as the Rumford Falls Village Corporation never approved, nor refused to approve, the Act; and lastly, because the commissioners’ report was illegally and improperly filed in the office of the clerk of the supreme judicial court. At that stage of the proceedings the case was reported to this court. If the Act is unconstitutional, or inoperative, or if by failure to have the report filed in the proper office, the plaintiff has lost the benefit of the proceedings, the cause must be dismissed. Otherwise it must be remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the statute.
We think the defendant’s contention is not tenable. First, it may be observed that if the Legislature intended that the meeting within the Village Corporation should be warned according to its special charter, it did not say so, at least, not expressly. There is a general law for warning town meetings. There is this special law for warning meetings of this corporation. Had the Legislature intended that the special method should be used rather than
We think, however, that the report was filed in the right clerk’s office. The county commissioners did not act strictly as such. They were a special tribunal created by the Act. When their report was filed they had nothing more to do with the matter. All subsequent proceedings were to be had in the supreme judicial court. A Justice of that court had jurisdiction to affirm, reject or recommit their report. It would be a singular situation indeed for a judge of one court to be acting upon a report filed and pending in another court. The Act evidently intended that the report should be filed in the office of the clerk of the court which was to act upon it.
It is expedient to notice one more question, since the case must go back for further proceedings. The defendant claims that it has the right to appeal. The petitioner denies the right. The statute is somewhat crudely and clumsily drafted. It is not easy to construe all the provisions so as to make them harmonious. But the intendment of the Act is, we think, reasonably certain. Although the procedure is prescribed by section 6 which does not expressly include a right of appeal, section 3 cannot be disregarded. That section recognizes the right of appeal. Even section 6 inferentially recognizes it by its reference to the award of a “committee in case of appeal.” We think it evident that the Act was intended to give the defendant a right of appeal, to be exercised subject to the limitations of time prescribed by section 3. And that section expressly made the right of appeal subject to the limitations prescribed in the case of damages by the laying out of highways.
To sum up, we hold that the bridge district act is constitutional and operative; that the plaintiff district has been legally organized; that it has taken the proper steps for taking the bridge property, and for having the valuation fixed; that the report of the county commissioners was properly filed, and that thereupon the defendant had the right of appeal to be exercised seasonably within the statutory limitation.
Remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the opinion.