36 P. 535 | Or. | 1894
Lead Opinion
Opinion by
Rehearing
On Rehearing.
Opinion by
The petition, which is the foundation for the proceedings in the county court, is as follows: “The undersigned, your petitioners, respectfully ask for the location and establishment of a county road commencing at the northwest corner of the donation land claim of W. Eastham, in section twenty-five, township five south, range one west, in said county of Marion, thence north about one hundred and sixty rods to the center of the old county road leading from Shuck’s Mill in said Marion County to the town of Woodburn in said county. Application will also be made at the same time to said court to vacate all that portion of the present county road from Shuck’s Mill to said town of Woodburn, which is situated between the termini of said proposed road, and which runs diagonally across the land claims at present owned by G. W. Vedder
It may be observed that the south termini of the road to be vacated and the road to be established are three eighths of a mile apart, and that each intersects what is known as the Shuck’s Mill and Gervais Koad, this latter road forming the base of a right angle triangle, of which the new road would be the perpendicular and the one to be vacated the hypothenuse. It is also apparent that householders residing to the east and just within the vicinity of the southern terminus of the road sought to be vacated would not be within the vicinity of the road sought to be established, and the same would be true on the other hand of householders residing to the west and just within the vicinity of the southern terminus of the road to be established. They would not be within the vicinity of the road to be vacated. Thus, it will be seen that all the parties to the petition and remonstrance herein might not have the statutory qualifications to prosecute or contest the establishment of one or the vacation of the other road, taken singly. This is a strong circumstance showing why it would be better to prosecute such proceedings singly, but it is _ perhaps not conclusive. Neither is the circumstance that the termini of the two ways ar© not the same conclusive that the proceeding is not for an alteration. In Hobart v. Plymouth County, 100 Mass. 159, a petition was filed representing that the highway was narrow and crooked, praying that it might be widened, straightened, and newly located, and such parts discontinued as might be rendered unnecessary by such location; the county commissioners voted to widen the highway to a certain point, thence to locate a new highway to a point on the line of the old
These considerations have cogent application to the case in hand. The petition here is in form for the establishment of a . new road and the vacation of an old one, but is it in substance a petition for an alteration? and can it be treated in that light in consideration of the relation which the old road bears to the new, their respective lengths, and their connections with other public roads of the county? The proposed new road is twenty-eight and eighty-three hundreths chains in length, and the road required to be vacated forty-one 'and ninety-five hundreths. They diverge one from the other at an angle of more than forty-five degrees, and intersect the same public road on the south thirty and nine hundreths chains apart. The road to be vacated constitutes a part of what is known as the Shuck’s Mill and Woodburn Road, the base of the triangle serving as a part of the Shuck’s Mill and Gervais Road. The new way increases the distance to Shuck’s Mill from Woodburn almost nineteen chains. Under these conditions it cannot be said that the new supersedes the old and renders it unnecessary. The respective lengths of the two roads are so great and their divergence so marked as to dispel the idea that the one is to supersede the other, or that the location of the one will render the other unnecessary. These conditions being wanting, the petition cannot be considered as substantially one for an alteration only. The county court properly considered the petition as the commencement of two proceedings, the one for a location and the other for a vacation of a county road. The former opinion of the court is therefore adhered to. Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). I am unable to agree with my brethren in this case. In my opinion the petition in question is in effect an application for the alteration of an existing county road, and should have been so treated by the county court.