Merrill v. Selectmen of Saugus
Merrill v. Selectmen of Saugus
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing a petition for a writ of certiorari brought by a landowner against the selectmen of the town of Saugus for the purpose of quashing the action of the respondents in purporting to take an easement in his land for the purpose of a public way together with an easement for a slope in land adjoining the boundaries of the land taken.
At an adjournment of the annual town meeting held on April 6, 1953, it was unanimously voted that the town purchase or take by eminent domain for the purposes of a highway “a strip of land approximately 400 feet long and 40 feet wide, as shown on plan on file with the town clerk, said strip of land being a portion of Lot A-96 on Assessors’ Plan 1038.” It was also voted that the town appropriate the sum of $10 for the purpose of carrying out said purchase or taking. The selectmen made an order of taking on December 7, 1953, where after referring to the action of the voters at the adjourned town meeting on April 6, 1953, and purporting to act under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) cc. 40 and 79 and “all
A petition for a writ of certiorari does not lie to set aside this alleged taking. It was said in Robbins v. Lexington, 8 Cush. 292, 293, that the law on the subject is “fully settled by an unbroken practice from the earliest times of the location of private and town ways; that they were always open to litigation as to their legality by any party aggrieved, in actions of trespass or case, when their legal existence was material to be shown, and not liable to be set aside by certiorari; we have felt bound to dismiss the petition, upon the ground that certiorari is not the proper mode to try the legality of a private way established by the doings of the selectmen and a vote of the town.” This limitation upon the remedy by certiorari has been recognized in Hooper v. Bridgewater, 102 Mass. 512, 513, Locke v. Selectmen of Lexington, 122 Mass. 290, Foley v. Haverhill, 144 Mass. 352, 353-354, Janvrin v. Poole, 181 Mass. 463, 464, and Stowell v. Board of Public Works of New Bedford, 184 Mass. 416.
We have at times decided the merits of the controversy when because of defects in the procedure the question was not presented for decision especially where considerable time and effort have been expended by the parties in presenting the issue, or where a matter of public exigency or public
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.