Scott v. Jackson

93 Ill. App. 529 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1901

Mb. Justice Dibell

delivered the-opinionof the court.

Isom Jackson and Barney Martin were adjoining land owners. They agreed upon a division of the fence between their lands, so that each should own and keep up a certain part thereof. Martin sold his land to Bobert Scott, and Jackson and Scott agreed that the old division should be retained, and that Scott should own and keep up the part previously belonging to Martin. Thereafter Scott’s part of the line fence became rotten, out of repair, and unfit to turn stock. He frequently promised Jackson to repair it, but did not. Jackson then, acting under the provisions of chapter 54 of the Revised Statutes, notified Scott in writing to select a fence viewer. The eight days fixed by section 8 of said statute passed without Scott making a selection. Jackson selected two viewers; they fixed a date for hearing the matter, caused written notice to be served upon Scott, and at the date named (and in the absence of Scott, who did not appear), viewed the fence, and afterward rendered a decision in writing requiring Scott to rebuild his part of the division fence. A copy of this order was served upon Scott. He did not act. After the expiration of thirty days, Jackson, acting under section 11 of said statute, served written notice upon Scott that unless he rebuilt said fence within sixty days thereafter, Jackson would rebuild it at Scott’s expensé. All the papers were filed in the office of the town clerk, as required by the statute. Scott did not build the fence. After the expiration of sixty days Jackson built it, and then brought this suit against Scott before a justice of the peace to recover the cost thereof. Jackson recovered before the justice, and Scott appealed to the Circuit Court, where, at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, defendant moved to exclude the evidence and direct a verdict for defendant. This motion was denied, and defendant excepted and offered no proof. A verdict was rendered for plaintiff for $103.93, the exact cost of the fence. Defendant moved for a new trial. This was denied, and judgment entered upon the verdict, and defendant appeals.

1. Defendant argues the complaint made by Jackson to the fence viewers was insufficient to give them jurisdiction to order a fence built. Eeliance is had on Hale v. Andrews, 75 Ill. 252, where the court said :

“ The notice served by appellee upon appellant, pursuant to which the viewers were selected, is jurisdictional, and they could not, without the express consent of the parties interested, act upon any other or different question than that expressed in the notice, and without notice they could not be selected to act at all.”

In that case the notice was that viewers were to be selected to settle a dispute concerning the proportion of the division fence to be made by each, while the viewers’ decision was that defendant should pay plaintiff a certain sum for part of a partition fence built years before by the grantor of plaintiff; and this the court held the viewers had no jurisdiction to require. Here Jackson, when on the witness stand, was unable to state what he told the viewers except that he wanted them to view the fence. But according to the above decision it is the notice served by Jackson upon Scott calling for fence viewers which determined the jurisdiction of the fence viewers thereafter selected under said notice, and if it were otherwise and the complaint he made to the viewers is the test of jurisdiction, the written notice he served and under which they acted is better evidence of the complaint he made than his subsequent memory of what he said. That notice informed Scott that he had neglected to repair or rebuild his proportion of the division fence between the adjoining lands of Scott and Jackson, fully describing the lands of each; that Jackson desired to submit the matter of the sufficiency of the fence, and Scott’s duty in the premises, to fence viewers of the town for their decision; and that if Scott neglected for eight days after receiving the notice to make choice of a viewer to act in the matter, Jackson would thereafter proceed and select both viewers for the purpose, and submit said matter to them. This notice, served upon Scott by reading and by copy, was filed with the town clerk, and was the source of the jurisdiction of the viewers afterward selected, and we think it conferred authority upon them to decide that Scott must rebuild, and to give such directions concerning the new fence as the statute placed within their control.

2. The order of the viewers, after reciting the previous proceedings, adjudged the fence insufficient, and directed that Scott, within thirty days after service of notice of the order, erect his proportion of the division fence, “ said fence to consist of posts and wires, commonly known as the Bowen .Gable Stay fence, of not less than ten wires; posts to be good oak or hedge, and placed not more than sixteen feet apart; stays to be not more than two feet apart; said fence to be, when completed, fifty inches high.” It is argued the order was erroneous in not directing a fence fifty-four inches high, and in directing the erection of a particular kind of fence. Section 2 of the statute provides as follows:

“ Fences four and one-half feet high and in good repair, consisting of rails, timber, boards, stone, hedges, barb wire or whatever the fence viewers of the town or precinct where the same shall lie shall consider equivalent thereto, shall be deemed legal and sufficient fences.”

In Ketchum v. Stolp, 15 Ill. 341, where, after the party required by the fence viewers to build a division fence failed to build it, and the other party had then built the fence less high than the legal requirement, it was held he could nevertheless recover the cost of the fence built, if it was practically a good fence and one which would answer the purpose for which it was designed, unless it appeared the fence was not worth as much in proportion to its cost as one of the legal height would have been; and the court said defendant 41 ought not to complain that it was made at a less cost to him than might have been incurred for that purpose.” Here, the proof shows the new fence is a good one and Avill turn stock, and it was in fact built about fifty-four inches high, except in passing over some elevations. The top and bottom wires Avere fifty inches apart, and the bottom wire was generally about four inches from the ground, except that the ground was very uneven, and in stretching the bottom Avire over certain" elevations or ridges, it necessarily rested upon the ground there. On account of the unevenness of the ground it was not practicable to make the fence at every place exactly the same number of inches above the surface. Again, the former fence Avas only four feet high, and this may be treated as a waiver of the right to a fence of the height prescribed by the statute. (Albright v. Bruner, 14 Ill. App. 319.) If it be conceded the viewers could not compel' the erection of a Bowen Cable Stay fence, yet by their order defendant was required to build a legal fence. It may be if he had built a sufficient fence of other materials and kind, it would have been a substantial compliance with the order. But he built none, and the fence plaintiff built is a legal fence, will turn stock, and has the approval of the viewers, and they have in effect exercised the poAver conferred upon them by section 2 of the statute, and determined a fence of that material to be a legal and sufficient fence. It is not shown that this fence cost any more than a legal fence of any other kind or material would have cost. The proof shows defendant caused the same kind of fence to be built on his own land, at the same price for the labor.

3. It is claimed the fence is not on the line of the old fence. The proof shows it is on the same line except that where the two fences joined, the old fence swayed slightly out of line, and plaintiff, in building the new fence, straightened the fence at that point. As said in Ketchum v. Stolp, supra, “ these objections are quite too technical for the administration of a neighborhood law like this, which was designed for the purpose of reasonable and practical justice, and to compel one neighbor to do justice to another.”

The judgment is affirmed.