44 A. 88 | N.H. | 1894
1. The judgment of the selectmen laying out the way in question, having been rendered on a petition properly before them (G. L., c. 67, s. 1), is not open to collateral attack, if the way laid out is substantially the way prayed for in the petition. Brown v. Brown,
The defendants insist that the record shows conclusively that the selectmen had no jurisdiction to lay out the way described in their return, because the petition asked for a road from one definite terminus to another, and the way laid out does not extend to the second terminus. It is claimed that the termini of the petition are definite bounds, that determine with exactness the extent of the road the selectmen are authorized to lay out, and that a laying out that does not begin and send at the points arbitrarily established in the petition is absolutely void. That a petition in writing is necessary to give the selectmen jurisdiction can admit of no doubt (state v. Morse,
By the act of February 8, 1791, it was provided: "That at any time hereafter, when there shall be occasion for any new highways or private roads, to be laid out in any town or place in state, the selectmen of such town or place, be, and hereby are empowered, on application made to them, if they see cause, to lay out the same, whether such highway or road be for the benefit of the town, or public in general, or for the benefit of the person or persons applying only." The act of July 3, 1829, reenacted this statute, adding the words "in writing" after the *79 words "made to them." Laws, ed. 1830, p. 573. Before that time the statute did not in terms require that the application for a new highway should be in writing; nor did it in terms make the jurisdiction of the selectmen depend upon the allegation, in the verbal or written application, of a fixed bound at each terminus of the proposed way. If the public good required the establishment of a more convenient means of communication between two places, the legislature furnished little direct evidence of a purpose to limit the jurisdiction of the selectmen in laying out the way by definite bounds, initial or final, arbitrarily established by interested parties.
By the statute of 1791, two questions of a judicial character were submitted to the determination of the selectmen, in case of an application for a public way: First, is there occasion for a way for the public accommodation between the points indicated in the application? Second, if it is found that such occasion exists, by what route will the public good be best subserved? Having decided the first question in the affirmative, they were not required by the statute to decline to answer the second, whenever the public good would not be promoted by a road having the exact termini established by the petitioners. The laying out of the most feasible route between the two fixed bounds is not necessarily equivalent to the laying out of the best route for the accommodation of public travel between the same bounds. In the one case the test is arbitrary and unyielding, in the other it is governed by a reasonable public-necessity. Unequivocal language in the statute would be necessary to overcome the natural presumption, that the legislature intended to authorize the selectmen to employ the latter test in laying out a public highway. If the selectmen find that there is "occasion" for better means of communication between the points set out in the petition, there is no inconsistency in a judgment laying out so much of the proposed way as is necessary to fulfill the primary purpose of the application. Any other judgment would result in apparent injustice, which it is not to be presumed the legislature' intended, when it conferred jurisdiction upon selectmen to lay out highways "on application made to them, if they see cause." The same injustice would result by such a narrow construction of the statute as would occur if in assumpsit the plaintiff were turned out of court upon a verdict giving him less than his entire claim. Referring to a similar statute the court say in Princeton v. County Commissioners, 17 Pick. 154, 156: "But it is contended, on the part of the present petitioners, that the petition for a highway prayed for, is one entire thing or subject-matter of judicial consideration and decision, and that it must be granted in whole, or rejected in whole. As a general rule, supposing the question to stand on the general statute of 1786, c. 67, s. 4, giving *80 power to the Court of General Sessions, upon application made therefor, to lay out new highways . . . without any express limitation, the construction contended for would hardly seem to be analogous to the course of judicial proceeding, where usually, upon the maxim that the whole embraces all the parts, a prayer, claim, or demand for a larger sum or quantity, is taken to be a prayer or claim for all the sums or parts of which it is composed, and under such claim the party shall recover such part as he can establish title to. . . . Nor is there any case that I am aware of, in which it has been held under the statute of 1786, the Court of Sessions could not lay out a part of the highway prayed for."
In the revision of 1842 it was provided that "selectmen upon petition are authorized to lay out any new highway . . . within their town for which there shall be occasion, either for the accommodation of the public or the person applying." R. S., c. 49, s. 1. This language with slight and unimportant changes was adopted in the Compiled Statutes, c. 52, s. 1, the General Statutes, c. 61, s. 1, and in the General Laws, c. 67, s. 1, which were in force when the road in question was laid out.
In Eames v. Northumberland,
Formerly it was customary for petitioners to designate the intermediate bounds of the proposed highway; "and the result was a failure to lay out the ways, and delay, and increased expense, even in cases where the public good required roads to be laid out between the termini of the ways asked for, but not upon lines to which they were limited. In such cases, the committee or commissioners having no authority to lay out the ways in any other places than those specified in the petition, the ways were of course not laid out, and the public were left to suffer from the want of them." Wiggin v. Exeter,
"It is quite clear, that highways in this state can only be laid out upon a written petition, and that they must be laid out substantially in conformity therewith. A road cannot be laid out upon a route substantially other and different from that described in the petition, fairly and properly understood according to its legal construction and intendment." Raymond v. Griffin,
In Ford v. Danbury,
If Cole v. Canaan,
2. As the way in question has not been used twenty years for public travel, the plaintiff cannot recover without showing a defect in it at a point where a highway has been laid out in the mode prescribed by statute. P. S., c. 67, s. 1; Tilton v. Pittsfield,
3. The judgment lays out a way on one, or at most two, lines, while the survey of the road as constructed shows that it has several courses. It follows that in many places the road as built is not the road that was laid out. The construction of the road on courses different from those specified in the return does not change the legal effect and meaning of the return, or make all parts of the road fall within the legal limits of the highway. The defect complained of may not have been in the highway that was laid out, and in that event the town would not be liable.
Case discharged.
SMITH, J., did not sit; BLODGETT and CHASE, JJ., dissented: the others concurred.