102 Minn. 318 | Minn. | 1907
Proceedings before the board of supervisors of the town of .Tyrone,. Le Sueur county, resulted in an order establishing and laying out a highway in said town. The highway so laid out extended over the land of several persons, including defendant. The board assessed to-defendant as damages for the- taking of his land the sum of $150. After the completion of the proceedings, the final order and assessment of damages, the town paid to defendant the amount so assessed to him, and he in turn executed and delivered to the officers thereof a release of all claim for damages because of the highway, which was filed with the town clerk. Thereafter, on the claim that the proceedings before the town board were void for want of jurisdiction, and. hence that the payment to defendant was unauthorized and unlawful, this action was brought by the town board to recover back the money so paid. Defendant had judgment in the court below, and plaintiff appealed.
The theory of the action is that the proceedings had by the board for the purpose of establishing the highway in question were void, and of no force or effect, because (1) the petition for the proposed highway prayed, not only for the establishment of the proposed road,.
We are unable to concur with appellant in its view of the case. So far as defendant is concerned, he was properly served with notice of the proceedings, appeared before the board and took part therein, and subsequently accepted the damages awarded him and executed to the town the usual release in such cases. Whether the petition was irregular or defective in praying for excessive relief, namely, the vacation of the other highway, it is not necessary to determine. The board did not act on that feature of the petition. As between defendant and the town, the proceedings resulted in a lawful highway, for the laying of which over his land the damages were awarded, and the final order of the board was not wholly void for the failure to serve notice upon some of the other property owners. It is true that notice to the property owners is essential in proceedings of this kind to confer jurisdiction upon the board to hear and determine the petition, and, if no notice was given at all, the whole proceedings would be coram non judice and void. “It is not, however,” says Elliott on Roads & Streets, § 318, “to be understood that where there is jurisdiction of the subject-matter and there are many persons interested as owners of different parcels of land, failure to give notice to some of the property owners will vitiate the entire proceeding. In such cases the better opinion is that the proceeding is void only as to those who have not been notified, but valid as to those who have had notice. A different rule would often work injustice to the public, as well as to the citizens; for it might happen that a highway would affect many persons, and all of them, except one, be duly notified, and it would, under a rule different from that stated, be in his power to overturn the whole proceedings” — citing State v. Richmond, 26 N. H. 232; State v. Easton R. Co., 36 N. J. L. 181; Kidder v. Jennison, 21 Vt. 108; Nichols v. Salem, 14 Gray (Mass.) 490.
This rule has, for all practical purposes, been followed and applied
The only inconvenience to result from this conclusion will be the institution of new proceedings to complete the road over the land belonging to those not duly notified.
Judgment affirmed.