40 N.H. 307 | N.H. | 1860
The Eevised Statutes (chapter 49, section 1) authorize selectmen of towns, upon petition, to lay out any new highway, or to widen and straighten any existing highway within their town, &e.; and by chapter 50 the Court of Common Pleas is invested with the same powers in certain cases. There being a distinction made in the law between laying out new highways and widening and straightening existing ones, the question is raised by this case, as to where the line is to be drawn between them; for although it is well settled that, upon a petition for a new highway, selectmen and commissioners may lay out a road in part new, and in part over and upon an existing highway [Hopkinton v. Winship, 35 N. H. 209, and cases cited], yet it would not be competent, upon a petition for a new highway, to undertake merely to widen an old one without laying any part new; and if, upon such a petition, there should be a report disclosing such a widening only, the court might not have jurisdiction to render
In Massachusetts their statute formerly authorized the court “ to lay out new county roads, or to turn or alter
By our statute, so long as the departures from the old route are evidently for the purpose of straightening the existing highway, and are not of very considerable length, they may be proper upon a petition like this. But should a new highway, evidently such, be attempted to be laid out upon a petition to widen and straighten only, then the jurisdiction is exceeded, and the action of the court is void, or at least voidable.
Having settled that the facts stated in this case do not show any new road laid, and nothing more than a proper straightening of an existing highway under the statute, it becomes unnecessary to consider the question of waiver raised in the case.
Upon the other question, as to the admissibility of the evidence offered, if we understand the case, there would seem to be no doubt. The case itself, at first, seems to be
Now the cage finds that this strip of land, added to the old road here, by the commissioners, was wholly impassable, so that if this land was needed for the road-bed, then the case negatives the presumption or the possibility that
The case, then, as we understand it, finds that this additional strip of land here was not fit for public use, whatever use it may have been designed for; but that something must be done to fit it for such use, and that this something, whatever it may be, had not been done, and that, too, after some six years had passed after the judgment was rendered upon the report widening the road. This is an information against the town for “ unreasonably neglecting to alter” and put in good repair a highway which has been widened and straightened therein, founded upon the second cause assigned in section 1 of chapter 58, Bevised Statutes, for which towns may be fined. Upon the facts stated in the case, then, the only question for the jury was, whether the town had unreasonbly neglected to do something, which was necessary to be done in order to fit this new portion of the highway for the use and purpose for which it was designed. But it was settled, in State v. Landaff, 22 N. H. 588, that it fol
If there was no nuisance in the town neglecting to alter this road, so as to fit it for public use, in six years, there probably never would be, and the offer of the respondents would be substantially to prove that no change in the highway here was ever necessary, which could only have been proper evidence to be submitted to the commissioners who widened the road; but, after they have once settled, the question of the public necessity of this change would not afterwards be competent in any proceeding like this.
There must be, therefore,
Judgment upon the verdict.