151 Ind. 364 | Ind. | 1898
It appears from the record that a proceeding was brought to establish a highway in the counties of Tippecanoe and Montgomery, and that the relator Shepard filed with the board of commissioners of Montgomery county a remonstrance for damages to his real estate in Montgomery county, and was állowed $50. Said board of commissioners determined that the damages assessed were not greater than the utility of the proposed highway, and ordered that notice thereof be given to the auditor of Tippecanoe county, as required by section 6735, Burns’ R. S. 1894 (5010, Horner’s R. S. 1897).- After-wards the board of commissioners of each of said counties found in favor of the petition for said highway, and declared it located, and that each county pay one-half of the damages. The relator Shepard ap
It is settled law in this State that, in proceedings to establish highways in one county only, under the statute section 6748, Burns’ R. S. 1894 (5021, Horner’s R. S. 1897), the question of whether or not the damages shall be paid out of the county treasury is one solely for the consideration" and determination of the board of county commissioners. Jamieson v. Board, etc., 56 Ind. 466, 475, 476; Hayes v. Board, etc., 59 Ind. 552; Wilkinson v. Bixler, 88 Ind. 574, and cases cited. As was said by this court in Wilkinson v. Bixler, 88 Ind. 574, on p. 577, “It is a matter exclusively within the discretion of the board, and its judgment and determination in that regard cannot be controlled, coerced, or reviewed by any other court. Whether the whole or one-half of the damages should be thus paid out of the public treasury, and the other half having been paid by the petitioners, was a question which the board had the exclusive right to determine; and having determined it, that determination cannot be reviewed upon appeal to the circuit court.” -It is also settled law “that the petitioners
In Hayes v. Board, etc., 59 Ind. 552, on p. 553, this ■court said, “A proposed highway may be of public utility, and yet it may not be of sufficient importance to the public to justify the payment of the damages out of the county treasury. It may be of sufficient public utility to call into exercise the right of, eminent domain, and to authorize it to be laid out upon the lands of private persons, upon the payment of the damages occasioned thereby, and yet not of sufficient public importance to require those damages to be paid out of the public treasury. The statute leaves it to the board of commissioners to determine when damages are to be paid out of the county treasury. * * * ppg statute also clearly contemplates that damages may be paid by those who desire the establishment of the proposed highway, for it provides, that, ‘No such highway shall be opened, worked or used, until the damages assessed therefor shall be paid to the persons entitled thereto, or deposited in the county treasury for their use, or they shall give their consent thereto in writing filed with the auditor of such county.’” Section 6752, Burns’ R. S. 1894 (5025, Horner’s R. S. 1897). Section 6752 (5025), supra, applies to proceedings to establish highways in one county or in more than one county.
After the return of the verdict in the Montgomery Circuit Court assessing the relator Shepard’s damages at $450, as the question involved was as to the amount of such damages, the only power the court had was to render the proper judgment for cost, and order the case remanded to the boards of commissioners of said counties, for them to determine whether said damages were greater than the utility of the proposed highway. If such boards so determined the highway could not be established unless the petitioners would pay all the damages or such part thereof as said boards determined necessary so that the amount remaining unpaid would not be greater than the utility of the proposed highways. The rec