Freeman v. Cornish
Freeman v. Cornish
Opinion of the Court
Chapter 63, section 10, General Statutes, provides that any land-owner or other person aggrieved by the decision of the selectmen, in laying out or altering a highway, or in the assessment of damages in any case relating to a highway, may appeal therefrom to the supreme court by petition within one year after the highway or alterations are made ; and section 11 of the same chapter provides that if a land-owner or other person interested appeals from the decision of the selectmen laying out or altering a highway, he shall file his petition, if he had actual notice of the laying out or altering, within sixty days after the return thereof is recorded.
This case is an appeal from the decision of the selectmen of Cornish in laying out a highway and awarding damages to the appellant. The town moved to dismiss the petition on the ground that it was not filed within sixty days after the record of the return.
So far as the appeal from the assessment of damages is concerned, this objection fails, because section 11 relates only to appeals from the laying out or altering. But we have considered the further question presented by the case, whether the appeal must be dismissed as to the laying out for the cause -claimed.
It appeared that the plaintiff had due notice of the hearing on the petition for the highway, and appeared; and it was contended that this was actual notice of the laying out, within the meaning of section 11, so as to limit the time allowed for appeal to sixty days. The court ruled otherwise, and we have no doubt that ruling was correct. By no stretch of construction can a notice that the selectmen propose to examine and consider whether they will or will not lay out a highway, be held equivalent to notice that they have actually laid out one.
Upon this ruling being made, further evidence was offered, showing that at the hearing the selectmen decided to lay out the highway, and at that time verbally communicated their decision to the plaintiff: The question is whether that was actual notice to him of the laying out within the meaning of section 11.
It need not be said that when this communication was made the highway was not in fact laid’ out, because there were other acts to be done by the selectmen, the most important and vital of which were making a return and causing the laying out to be recorded.
The notice, then, could not be of the laying out, as called for by the statute, but must have been and was of quite a different thing, namely, of the intention, purpose, and decision of the selectmen, ‘then formed,
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