State ex rel. Vos v. Hoelz

69 Wis. 84 | Wis. | 1887

OetoN, J.

From an order laying out a highway, and discontinuing another highway near it, an appeal was taken to the commissioners appointed by a justice of the peácé, *86and said order was affirmed. ' An appeal was thereupon attempted to be taken to commissioners appointed by the county judge from the order of the commissioners so affirming the order of the supervisors. The statute (sec. 1281, R. S.) requires the application for said appeal to be accompanied by a bond to the town, conditioned that the appellant shall “ pay all costs arising from such appeal, provided such order or determination of the commissioners shall not be reversed.” The bond in this case was conditioned that the obligors “ shall pay all costs arising from said appeal, provided the determination of said supervisors, in laying out and discontinuing said highway above described, shall not be reversed.” The above section provides that “ such appeal shall be accompanied by a lihe bond ” as the first appeal from the determination of the supervisors. The appellant made the mistake of executing a bond preeisely lihe that bond, even as to the order appealed from. Such a bond would be invalid to secure the payment of the costs arising from said appeal because it is not so conditioned. The bond is therefore void. The statute is very plain and explicit. The first appeal is called an appeal from the determination of the supervisors, and the second an appeal from the determination of the commissioners appointed by a justice of the peace. They are distinct judicial determinations, as much as judgments of a court can be, and the appeals are not a series of appeals from the same determination, but distinct and independent appeals from the different determinations or judgments. But the statute is too plain, to bear an argument, or to afford even an apology for such a mistake.

Sec. 1280, R. S., requires the commissioners, before they shall act ¡under the warrant of their appointment, to be duly sworn, “justly and impartially to discharge their duties;” and sec. 1281, in relation to the appeal from the determination of the commissioners appointed by the jus*87tice of the peace, requires the commissioners appointed by the county judge, before they can act under the warrant of their appointment, to take a like oath, viz., “that they will justly and impartially discharge their duties.” The oath administered to the commissioners in this case was as follows: “You do each of you solemnly swear that you will .fairly and impartially hear the evidence given, and review the premises mentioned, in th'e matter of the appeal in the above-entitled matter, and fairly and impartially decide the same.” This' oath is not in substance as that required by the statute. The learned counsel of the respondent has correctly specified the duties required to be discharged by the commissioners, and which they are required to swear they will “ justly and impartially discharge,” namely: (1) to meet at the time and place appointed; (2) to examine the highway or highways; (3) to hear the parties interested; (4) to hear the proofs offered by the parties; (5) to reduce their decision to writing, and sign and annex it to the warrant; (6) to file their decision with the proper officer in the time required by law. It is very clear that the commissioners were not qualified to act by taking the proper oath. The commissioners did, however, act,— viewed and examined the highways, and reviewed the order appealed from, or attempted to be appealed from; heard the parties interr ested, and all proofs offered by them; and decided and determined that said order and determination' of the first commissioners be and the same were by them in all things reversed; and their decision was reduced to writing, and filed with the town clerk of the town in which said highways are situated. The decision of said commissioners, and the records thereof, were removed to the circuit court by writ of certiorari; and upon the hearing thereof the decision or determination of the commissioners so appointed by the county judge was reversed, and this appeal is taken from said judgment of reversal of the circuit court. •

From the intimations of counsel in their briefs, we con-*88elude that the circuit court reversed the order of the commissioners on the ground that they acquired no jurisdiction in the matter by reason of there having been given no bond, and by reason of the commissioners not having been sworn as required by the statute. We think that the circuit court decided correctly that such defects were jurisdictional^ and that the decision or determination of the commissioners was therefore void. The case is as if no bond had been given and no oath taken. The three boards or bodies, to view the ground, hear the evidence and arguments, and decide upon the question of laying out or discontinuing a highway, the first acting originally, and the two last upon appeal, are tribunals, and act judicially, and can obtain or retain jurisdiction only by strict compliance with the statutes, and no consent or waiver can dispense with such strict compliance with the statutes in matters of substance. This has been so often and recently decided in principle by this court that the citation of authorities is not necessary. In the recent case of Ruhland v. Sup'rs, 55 Wis. 664, the defect was too long an adjournment of the hearing, and decision and by consent. It was a violation of the statute conferring jurisdiction, and that was sufficient to render the decision void. In that case nearly all the cases on the subject in this court are reviewed, and the reasoning of Mr. Justice .Taylor is exhaustive and conclusive. See the cases therein cited, and also the late case in Iowa of Scott v. Lasell, 71 Iowa, 180. The cases of State ex rel. Houston Co. v. Fitch, 30 Minn. 532, and State ex rel. Berfield v. Com'rs McLeod Co. 27 Minn. 90, are closely in point as to the bond and the oath. It is astonishing that the officers of the law, in so important a matter as taking away or burdening the lands of private owners for a public use, should make such egregious mistakes in trying to follow the plain directions of the statutes; or, rather, in not trying to do so.

By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

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