49 Wis. 284 | Wis. | 1880
It appears in the evidence that in the year 1875 the supervisors of the town of Mineral Point made an order laying out a public highway across the laird of the plaintiff described in the complaint. Although on the trial the plaintiff sought to impeach the validity of that order, it will he assumed, for the purposes of this appeal, that the order was valid, and established a public highway. It will also be assumed that the acts of the defendants' complained of were only the removal by them of obstructions from the land of the plaintiff within the limits thus established as a public highway. The plaintiff maintains that in March, 1877, and before the alleged trespasses were committed by the defendants, the line of the highway across his lands was duly and legally changed, and that the locus in quo then and thereby ceased to be a public highway. Whether the line of the highway was thus changed, is the controlling question in the determination of this appeal. If it was, the acts complained of were trespasses, and the plaintiff was entitled to the judgment he recovered. If it was not, the defendants should have judgment.
The evidence shows that a petition or application purporting to be signed by more than six freeholders residing in the town of Mineral Point, was presented by the board of supervisors of that town, asking them to change the highway in question by discontinuing it between certain designated points, and laying out a highway on another lino, terminating at the same points. Thereupon the board met and formally fixed a day and place for a meeting of the supervisors to decide upon the application, and, in substance, directed the town clerk to make out and give the proper notices of such meeting, authorizing him to sign their respective names thereto. The clerk caused such notice to be drawn up in due form, signed the names of two of the supervisors to it,'and attested it himself. It does not appear that it was not duly posted and served, and the evidence tends to show that it was.
The objections to the validity of those proceedings will now be considered in their order.
1. It is doubtless the law that if the supervisors, in refusing to alter the highway, acted without jurisdiction, it is fatal to all the subsequent proceedings, including their order altering the highway, made pursuant to the determination of the commissioners. Also, if notice of the meeting of the supervisors to decide the application was not given as required by the statute, the supervisors had no authority to make any order in the matter, and the order they made would not be a basis for further proceedings. It is argued that because the notice of such meeting was not signed by the supervisors, or by the town clerk in their presence and by their express direction, the notice was insufficient and the subsequent proceedings are void.
The statute requires that, “ upon application made to the
2. It is said that the record fails to show that the notice was served on one of the defendants, through whose land the altered highway passes; and it is claimed that the failure to make such service renders void all of the proceedings.
If we could say from the record that such failure occurred, the objection would be a very serious one. But we cannot say so. The order altering the highway is prima facie evidence of the regularity of all proceedings prior thereto. Tay. Stats., 492, § 69; R. S., 408, see. 1298. If is therefore prima facie evidence that the notice was served on all owners of lands through which the altered highway was laid. It is not sufficient that the record fails to show such service affirmatively. To impeach the validity of the proceedings the failure of service must appear affirmatively. We find in the record no proof of such failure.
3. The next objection is to the qualifications of the commissioners. All of them signed the petition to the supervisors for the proposed alteration of the highway, and that fact was called to the attention of the justice before whom the appeal proceedings were taken, and who made the list from which the
In Brock v. Hishen, 40 Wis., 674, in which the controversy related to the same highway, it was held that a supervisor who had joined in a former invalid order to lay out the highway was not a disinterested person within the meaning of the statute, and was therefore incompetent to act as a commissioner on an appeal from a subsequent order refusing to lay out the same highway. The same principle is applicable to the petitioners for the alteration of the highway. In a formal written application, invoking the action of the town authorities, they had deliberately expressed the opinion that the alteration ought to be made; and we think: they were not disinterested within the meaning and intention of the statute in that behalf.
In Brock v. Hishen, when the commissioners were selected no objection was made to the competency of the late supervisor to act as one of them. In this case, due and timely objection was made, by one having the right to make it, to the competency of such petitioners to act as commissioners; and it was the plain duty of the justice to strike their names from the list, and insert in their places the names of other persons who were competent to act.
"Were the court reviewing the proceedings of the commissioners on certiorari, brought in proper time, it is very probable that their determination would be reversed because the justice disregarded such objection and appointed commissioners who were not disinterested. But this is an irregularity only, and not jurisdictional. It was substantially so held in Brock v. Hishen; for in that ease the failure to object in due time to the competency of the late supervisor was held a
4. The validity of the determination of the commissioners is also denied because, although three were appointed, but two qualified and acted. A like objection was fconsidered and overruled in State ex rel. McCune v. Goodwin, 24 Wis., 286, where it was held that the provisions of subdivision 3, sec. 1, ch. 5, R. S. of 1858, were applicable in such a case. R. S., 1145, sec. 4971, subd. 3.
5. We concur in the ruling of the circuit judge that the condition in the order of the supervisors altering the highway, “the aforesaid highway is not to be discontinued until the road hereby laid out is opened,” is void, and does not affect the validity of the order making the alteration. After the commissioners had reversed their former order, nothing remained for the supervisors to do but to make the proper order altering the road, and to award the damages. When this was done, their authority in the matter was exhausted. All they attempted to do beyond that,, was inoperative for any purpose.
6. The condition in the releases of damages is of no importance. The consideration of such releases was, that the highway had been legally altered. If the proceedings to that end failed to alter it, the releases would become inoperative without any condition to that effect inserted in them.
The questions above considered and determined are believed to be decisive of the case. Other questions were argued and have been considered, but they are not deemed of sufficient importance to require discussion in this opinion. Our conclusion is, that the locus in quo ceased to be a public highway before the trespasses complained of were committed by the
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.