21 N.H. 454 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1850
Three exceptions are taken to the acceptance of this report. “ First, because there is a material variance between the route" described in the petition, (which is east of south from the western terminus,) and the road laid by said commissioners, (which is laid south, seventy-two degrees east.”) Under the former practice, in petitioning for, and laying out,.highways, this exception might have prevailed. It was then held, that the intermediate points of compass through the whole route, as also the distances, should not only be given in' the petition asking for the road, but that the report should follow
Under the present practice these difficulties do not exist. By the Revised Statutes, the justices of the Superior Court are required, to make, from time to time, all necessary rules and orders for conducting the business in said court and in the Court of Common Pleas. Rev. Stat. ch. 171, § 9. By virtue of this clause of the statute, several rules have been adopted by the court, upon the subject of highways, one of which is applicable to this exception. It is as follows: “ Petitions for highways must give the termini of the road prayed for, without fixing any intermediate'bounds.” Rules of Court, 81. Under this rule a very convenient practice has grown up, by stating in the petition, simply the general direction of the road prayed for from one terminus to another; and the commissioners, in laying out the road, have fixed the course with exactness, as they have deemed the public good to require. The giving of the general course has been held not to be the fixing of any intermediate point, and a variance by the commissioners in the location of the road from the general words of the petition, no substantial departure from the route prayed for. Wiggin v. Exeter, 13 N. H. Rep. 304. The petition before us states the route to be east of south. The commissioners lay out the road in the direction of south, seventy-two degrees east. This we cannot regard to be a variance.
The second exception is, that “ there is no eastern terminus stated with sufficient certainty in said petition.” The words of the terminus are general and vague, but it is now too late to
Tbe third and last exception is to the jurisdiction of tbe commissioners to act in tbe premises. This exception necessarily involves an inquiry into the jurisdiction of the court over the ease; inasmuch as the action of tbe commissioners was by virtue of a commission issued by tbe court. Tbe highway prayed for being within tbe limits of one town only, in order to give tbe court jurisdiction over tbe subject-matter, it must appear that tbe selectmen had neglected or refused to lay out tbe. road, or that the town bad discontinued it within two years from tbe time of tbe laying out by tbe selectmen. Rev. Stat. cb 50, § 1.
This petition is in tbe usual form, and states that tbe highway prayed for bad been laid out by tbe selectmen of tbe town, and that the town, at a legal meeting within two years thereafter, discontinued tbe road. Upon the face of tbe petition, therefore, sufficient appears to give tbe court jurisdiction; but upon tbe coming in of the report from tbe commissioners, papers are pre: sented which tend to show, that if they bad been laid before the court prior to tbe reference of tbe petition to tbe commissioners, it might, perhaps, have been rejected. How that would have been is unnecessary here to decide, as, in tbe opinion of tbe court, it is now too late to raise tbe objection. Contradictory statements appear in some of the papers- affecting the facts involved, which would have required considerable examination had they been offered when the petition was presented, and been considered pertinent to the inquiries which are raised.
Before tbe court will act upon a petition for tbe laying out or discontinuance of a highway, the town or individuals that are to be affected by the granting or rejection of the prayer of the petition, must receive thirty days’ notice of the pendency of the petition. Ample -time is thus given to retain counsel and prepare exceptions, if that course is desired to be taken. But if
Under the ordinary practice, when a petition is presented to the court based upon the refusal of the selectmen to lay out a road, or upon the action of the town in its discontinuance within two years after having been laid out by the selectmen, nothing more accompanies the petition than a certified copy of the one originally presented to the selectmen, that the court may see that both embrace the same road, together with evidence of the refusal of the selectmen to lay out the road, or in case of discontinuance, a certificate from the town-clerk that the road was laid out, and, at a legal meeting of the town, discontinued within two years. A primd fade case is thus made out, and the court do ,not require an extended copy of the doings of the selectmen in laying out the road, nor do they go into an examination of tho facts connected with the laying out or discontinuance, any further than they appear upon the common and ordinary papers, unless exceptions are taken before the reference of the petition to the commissioners. But if exceptions are taken, a full examination into all the proceedings, prior to the presentation of the petition to the court, oftentimes becomes necessary, and the petition is then rejected or referred, as the case may be. After the report has been made upon a reference of the petition, every proper presumption is to be made in favor of the regularity of the prior proceedings; and the court will not depart from the records and papers on file and go into an examination of extraneous matters going to affect the preliminary proceedings. So long as their records and files show that they have jurisdiction of the subject-matter, they will not go beyond them and consider matters that are unseasonably brought into Court, and thereby oust themselves of jurisdiction, and subject the parties to much expense. In Robbins v. Bridgewater, 6 N. H. Rep. 524, it
The exceptions must all be overruled, and the
Report accepted.