Cross v. Police Jury
Cross v. Police Jury
Opinion of the Court
The Police Jury of the parish of Lafourche Interior, in November, 1842, passed a resolution, directing that a jury of seven freeholders should be appointed, for the purpose of laying out a public road from the bayou Lafourche, “so as to effect a free and easy communication to the bayous Sec, L’Ours and Chackbé,” in compliance with the act of the Legislature, passed in 1818, relating to the public roads in the State. B. & C.’s Digest, 737. Acts of 1818, p. 54. The jury being duly qualified, proceeded to discharge the duties imposed on them, and after various examinations of different routes, fixed upon a line for the road, and made their report, which was confirmed by
The answer, after a general denial, admits the laying out of the road; its necessity and utility are alleged; assents to a change, which might, perhaps, render it more convenient for the complainant; and then proceeds to aver, that the complainant, when he found that the road must pass through his land, insisted on its passing in a direct line, and that it was at his own sug
The cause was submitted to a jury, before whom a mass of testimony was introduced. A number of bills of exceptions were taken, to the admission and rejection of testimony.
It appears that there are a number of inhabitants on the bayous Sec, L’Ours and Chackbé, who are from five to ten miles distant from the bayou Lafourche, which is the navigable stream on which their crops must be transported to market, and on the banks of which the court-house of the parish, and the village where these inhabitants trade and transact their business, are situated. There is no public road from these settlements to the bayou Lafourche ; and the object is to get one. The necessity for the road is undeniable. The complainant owns a large sugar plantation about four miles from the bayou Lafourche, near to, or on which, is a spot called “ the Sycamores,” where all admit that the road must pass, for the purpose of avoiding swamps and water-courses, which are difficult to cross. To reach this point, it is necessary to pass over the complainant’s land in some direction. That selected by the jury of freeholders is nearly in a direct course through the cultivated lands, and divides the tract unequally, putting the sugar house on the smallest portion, and separating it from the main plantation, but not from the other buildings on the place. The proposed road will run from twenty to thirty arpents through the field and over good ground, and the jury allowed twenty-five dollars for each running arpent, the road to be only thirty feet wide.
On the part of the complainant several witnesses were examined, who were requested by him to view the premises and proposed routes, and they have given their opinions and observations in evidence. These witnesses admit that the proposed route selected by the jury is as good, perhaps better than any other, for the purpose intended; but they say, that it will injure the complainant more than any other. They estimate the damage at a rate far beyond that fixed by the jury, some of them fixing the amount as high as $8000. The reasons they give for making such an allowance, are not stated with much detail. In fact, they all say, that no estimate of particular items was made ; but that a
The parol testimony fills upwards of sixty closely written pages, consisting of details as to the elevation of ridges of land, the depth and number of the swamps and bayous, the facilities and difficulties of making roads on the various routes proposed, the interviews and negotiations between the freeholders and the complainant, and many other circumstances, which, if recapitulated, would be unintelligible to anyone not acquainted with the localities. No map or diagram comes up with the record, yet references are repeatedly made to lines and courses, bearing to nearly every point of the compass. From the difficulty we have had in understanding and applying the testimony, we can well imagine the embarrassment and difficulty of the Judge and jury, before whom the cause was tried. In a matter involving so many local details, it is impossible for any one who has not himself seen the ground, to form an accurate opinion. Some of the jury who tried the case were probably acquainted with the topography of the proposed routes, as were the witnesses who examined them at the instance of the complainant; but the verdict of seven citizens, themselves owners of real estate, and most of them planters, acting under an oath so strong and solemn as that required of them, ought not to be disregarded except for the most cogent reasons, in a matter to which their particular attention has been drawn, and which it seems they had under consideration for several months.
The jury, after a most tedious trial of nearly two weeks, found a verdict in favor of the complainant, “ rejecting and setting aside
Before proceeding to consider the principles of law, we will state the conclusions drawn from the testimony. It appears, that the complainant is unwilling to have any road through his land at all; but, if it be unavoidable, he wishes to have it placed on ground as little valuable as possible, and to be made so circuitously as not to interfere with his own arrangements. If interfered with, the object then appears to be to make as much money as possible out of the parish. The convenience of the public, and of those citizens who are excluded from a navigable stream, and from communication with their seat of justice and market town, seems to have but little weight.
Our Code provides, that no one shall be divested of his property , unless for some purpose of public utility, and on consideration of an equitable indemnity, which includes not only the value of the property, but the damages caused' by taking it. Civ. Code, art. 489. But this equitable indemnity does not mean an extravagant allowance, to be made out of the public coffers for imaginary injuries. The ancient laws and usages of the country required of the proprietor of every tract of land, to furnish a road for public use. These have in some degree been modified by our legislation; but the great principle remains at the foundation, that a portion of each individual’s private rights must sometimes be yielded for the public good and convenience. A single individual, whose estate is enclosed by others, has a right under articles 695 and 698 of the Code, to claim a passage over the land of his neighbor, upon a proper indemnification. In. exercising this right, as little injury as is compatible with the object, must be done ; but a practicable passage must be afforded, and a reasonable convenience consulted on both sides. Articles 701 and 703, show that proprietors of lands fronting on a river or stream, are bound to give a road on or near its border, even without compen
We coincide in opinion with the District Judge, that the Legislature has wisely entrusted to the Police Juries of the different parishes, the power of laying out and establishing public roads. None but owners of landed property can be appointed members of the jury to report on the projected route. Their interests and sympathies are generally the same with other land owners. They are sworn to do justice; and while the advantage of the public is to be consulted, they are to do as little injury as possible to individuals. Enclosed and cultivated lands are not to be wantonly entered upon or taken from a proprietor, when a practicable and good road can be had, by taking a different direction. On the other hand enclosed lands are not sacred; and their proprietors have no right to subject the convenience of a community to their caprices or interests, or to compel its members to toil through swamps and across large streams, to construct a road ou a circuitous route, which, when finished, will be impracticable during a large portion of the year. The law has also given to every citizen through whose land a road is laid out, a right of appeal to the District Court, either as to the course it is. to take, oías to the damages assessed. The supervising power, as to the course of the road, we think ought to be cautiously exercised, as it will most generally involve questions not judicial, but of police ; and the proceedings of the jury of freeholders, and of the Police Jury, should be sustained, unless manifestly unjust. If a court and jury undertake to revise them, particularly as to the location of the route, it should only be done upon the most accm rate information, obtained by experts properly qualified, accompanied by plans and diagrams, enabling the judicial tribunal to ' act advisedly. The judgment of a sworn jury, acting upon their own observations, made on the ground, should have much weight, and prevail over the loose opinions of those who incur no responsibility, are not sworn, and make an ex parte examination at the request of an interested person.
The District Judge instructed the jury, that in this case, the complainant had a right to contest with the Police Jury the route
The next error in the charge of the Judge, was a consequence of the one just noticed. He told the jury that, if they should think any of the routes indicated by the complainant preferable to the one selected by the jury of freeholders, they had no right to say so, and direct the road to be made on that route, but must
The Judge should, in our opinion, have told the jury that the complainant, upon his single opposition, without making any other party than the Police Jury, must be confined to contesting the opening of the proposed road within his own limits; that it was not competent for him to indicate or select routes on the lands of others, without bringing them before the court. That upon the issues made, it was competent for the complainant to point out any one or more routes across his plantation, reasonably convenient to the public and practicable, and less injurious to himself, and if the jury should so find, that such other route should be substituted for that selected by the jury of freeholders, and the road made on it. That, as a general rule, the most direct and best route should be selected ; but that this rule is subject to exceptions, one of which is, that too much injury is not to be inflicted on private individuals. That, therefore, where a direct course would cause great damage, the road should approximate to it as near as it can, under all the circumstances.
With our views of the case, we think it should be remanded for a new trial; and this makes it necessary that we should decide upon the bills of exceptions.
The next bill was taken by the counsel of the Police Jury, to the refusal of the Judge to permit Beatty, a witness for that body, who was under cross-examination, to answer as fully as he desired to a question propounded to him. The question was, would the complainant have to haul his wood or cane along the road proposed ? The witness answered, that the greatest part of the cane would have to be hauled across the road, to get to the sugar house, and that neither it, nor the wood, would necessarily be hauled on the proposed road. The witness then proposed to add : “ that it would then be necessary for him, (Cross) either to pursue a circuitous route for hauling his sugar over a bad road, or else to haul it over the middle of his plantation, the carts passing and re-passing over the public road, with coco; and that from his knowledge of the plantation, it would be Cross’ interest to pass through the field instead of along this circuitous route.” This part of the answer quoted was objected to by the complainant, as not responsive to, nor necessarily connected with the question. The court rejected it, saying, if it were legal testimony, it could be elicited by a direct question put by the counsel of the Police Jury; but that it was not connected with or responsive to the question. We think the court erred in rejecting the answer. The object of the testimony previously submitted, was to show, that the proposed road would be of little or no service to Cross in hauling his cane and firewood ; and the object of the witness,
The next bill of exceptions was taken by the Police Jury. They offered as evidence, a petition presented by the complainant, in 1841, to the Police Jury, supported by parol testimony to show the action of a committee on it, and the selection by the complainant, at that time, of the road now consented to in the answer. The latter objected to its introduction, and the court sustained the objection, saying, that the only questions before the court were the direction of the road and the damages; that what the complainant might have thought advantageous in 1841, he might not consider so in 1843 ; that a change of position in his property, and other circumstances, may have operated a change of opinion in him. We think the Judge again erred. The evidence was certainly important upon the question of damages, and also upon that of the direction of the road ; for the court and jury certainly had a right to alter it within complainant’s limits, more particularly as the Police Jury consented. If there has been any change in the property or circumstances, it is competent for the complainant to show it, and thus destroy the effect of the evidence.
The next bill of exceptions was taken by the counsel for the complainant, to the opinion of the court rejecting a question put to a witness named Navarre. He was asked if a better road could not be obtained than that laid out by the Police Jury, by starting at ten arjpents on the western line from the southwestern
The next bill of exceptions was taken by the Police J ury, to the decision of the Judge permitting evidence to go to the jury, as to whether a better road could or could not have been obtained, had the jury of freeholders commenced at a different point on the Lafourche, and taken a different course over the lands of others. This bill covers all the evidence of that description, and we have expressed an opinion upon the point in our comments on the charge of the Judge to the-jury. We think he should have rejected all such evidence, unless the proprietors of the lands over which the new routes pass, were parties. Then it might be proper; and upon hearing all interested, the appellate tribunal could advisedly carry the law into effect, by changing the route if it were deemed necessary.
The next bill of exceptions was also taken by the Police Jury to the refusal of the Judge to permit George S. Guión, to answer a question propounded to him in relation to the different routes through the complainant’s plantation. The witness had been asked, and had given his opinion upon a variety of matters connected with this controversy. He was asked to give another, which we think ought to have been permitted, and that its effect should have been left to the jury.
The next bill of exceptions was taken by the counsel for the Police Jury, who objected to all evidence going to show that any other route would cost less than the one designated by them, as it was a question which concerned only the public and themselves, and the complainant had no right to inquire into it. The Judge
The last bill is disposed of, in our decision in relation to the charge of the Judge to the jury.
It is, therefore, ordered, that the judgment rendered herein be annulled and reversed, the verdict of the jury set aside, and the case remanded for a new trial, with directions to the Judge to charge the jury as herein stated, and in the reception and rejection of evidence to be governed by the principles and directions stated in this opinion, and in other respects to proceed according to law ; the appellee paying the costs of this appeal.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Benjamin Cross v. The Police Jury of Lafourche Interior
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published