State v. Justice
State v. Justice
Opinion of the Court
It was insisted, on behalf of the defendants, that the certiorari ought to have been endorsed in the name of the state against the prosecutor, and for this error ought to be quashed. The writ itself is admitted to be correct. If it was wrongly endorsed we should not hesitate to permit it to be amended, as has heretofore been the practice. 6 Halst. 71; 2 Green 426. But it is endorsed in accordance with the most usual, and, I think, the most correct practice.
The case of The State v. Kirby, 2 South. 835, was not like this. In that case there were no other parties than the state, on the one side, and the prosecutor of the writ, on the other, and he was, therefore, the only proper person to make defendant. In this case the prosecutor is a party on the one side, and the persons named as defendants, who were applicants for the road, are parties on the other side. The writ might with propriety have been endorsed as between those parties, without naming the state. In the case of Griscom v. Gilmore, 3 Green 475, it was held that in the case of a private road the public have no such interest as to justify the use of the name of the state. But this writ brings up the proceedings in the case of a public road, where the name of the state may be used with great propriety.
The proceedings before us, so far as they relate to the appointment of the surveyors, and the laying out and return of the road by them, are admitted to be correct. It appears that the prosecutor filed a caveat against recording the return, and that, upon his application, six chosen freeholders were duly appointed to review the road. Four of the freeholders certified to the court, at the next term, that they believed the laying out of said road to be unnecessary and injurious 5 and it is admitted that their certificate, upon the face of it, is in all respects correct. The Court of Common Pleas, however, upon motion in behalf of the defendants, granted a rule upon the caveator, the now prosecutor, to show cause why the certificate of the freeholders should not be set aside, and that rea
By the eighth section of the road act, (Rev. Stat. 518) it is declared that the certificate and proceedings of the freeholders shall be binding and conclusive in all cases, and shall not be subject to an appeal or certiorari, or to be set aside for lack of form. The obvious and correct policy of the act is, that a road shall not be laid out or vacated until it has not only been passed upon by the surveyors, but, if any person thinks proper to file a caveat, and apply for the appointment oí' freeholders, until it has been reviewed by them. And now, that the expense of opening a road may be greatly increased by the assessment of the damages sustained by the owners of the land, it is highly important not only that the freeholders should carefully guard the public interest and give an independent judgment, uninfluenced by the previous proceedings of the surveyors, but that if they do actually adjudge the road to be in their opinion unnecessary or injurious, their decision should not fail of effect because they may not have been mindful of all the prescribed forms. It may be admitted that if their proceedings are substantially contrary to law, so that they may with propriety be regarded as nullities, the court to which
The first reason assigned in the court below, and now insisted on for setting aside the certificate of the freeholders, is that the notice of the meeting of the freeholders was not set up in three of the most public places in the township, and that there was not legal proof thereof made to the freeholders. The certificate, on this point, is in the following words : “Due proof being made to us that the advertisements of our said meeting had been set up according to law, on which we decided.” By the depositions, it appears that one of the advertisements was set up at a certain mill, and, in the opinion of some of the witnesses, this was not one of the most public places. It is clear, however, that it belongs to the freeholders
The next reason assigned, and now insisted on is, that the freeholders did not actually chain the road that had been laid out. It appears that the first course ran through a small pond, in consequence of which the freeholders did not think proper to carry a chain through it. Much testimony was taken to show whether they could or could not conveniently do so. But there is nothing in the law or in the nature of their duties which require them to carry a chain or compass, unless they think proper to do so. They are required to view the road, as it appears they did. Surveyors, when they lay out a road, must of necessity have it surveyed, because they are required to make a map of it, with the courses and distances. All that it is necessary the freeholders should do, is to examine the road previously laid out or vacated, so far as may be necessary to enable them fairly to determine, upon their own view, whether it is in their opinion necessary or unnecessary, useful or injurious. This duty they are to fulfil according to their own best judgments, under the sanction of an oath or affirmation that they will act faithfully and impartially. The mode they will adopt to make the required view is left wholly to their own discretion, and no court has a right to interfere with their proceedings in that matter.
The only other reason now insisted on is, that the certificate of the freeholders was not based upon their opinion that the road was unnecessary and injurious, but upon assertions in regard to the expense of the same. In support of this reason, the depositions set forth declarations of some of the freeholders at the time, in regard to their opinions and motives, and set forth, also, the opinions of witnesses as to the usefulness of the road. The decisive answer to all this is, that the court had no right to inquire into the motives of the freeholders, or to determine whether they were right or wrong in their judgment as to the necessity or usefulness of the road. The court have nothing to do with this question in any stage of the proceedings. There is no proof, and hardly a pretence, that the freeholders acted fraudulently. Whether their judgment was right or wrong upon the merits of the question submitted to them, is a matter for their own consciences; no court can inquire into or interfere with their decision, which the law makes final and conclusive.
Upon a careful examination of the reasons assigned for setting aside the certificate, and of the depositions produced in their support, I am of opinion that the court erred in their decision, and that their order setting aside the certificate of the freeholders and ordering the clerk to record the returns of the surveyors must be reversed. There being no such illegality shown in the proceedings of the freeholders or of the caveator as will render the certificate a nullity, the consequence is,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.