Bockoven v. Board of Sup'rs.
Bockoven v. Board of Sup'rs.
Opinion of the Court
This being an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court sustaining a proceeding of the defendant board, initiated and conducted — so far, at least, as appellant’s interests are involved — in substantial conformity with the various statutory provisions relating to the laying out of public roads, we need not set forth the petition and proof of service, nor detail the successive steps of the board resulting in an award of $40 to appellant in the way of full compensation for a four-acre strip of land actually appropriated, together with incidental damages to the .farm from which it was taken.
The statute gives to the township supervisors jurisdiction of the subjeetmatter, and, asa method of acquiring jurisdiction of the person, specifies apetitilion signed by at least six legal voters, who are owners of land or occupants under the homestead or pre emption laws of the United States or under contract from the state, within one mile of the road to be laid out, and containing a definite description of the road, together with the names of the owners of lands, if known, over which the road is to pass. Before the supervisors can act upon such petition the signers must cause a copy thereof to be posted in three of the most public places in the township for 20 days. Within 30 days from the presentation of this petition,
While the petition before us is signed by 10 persons, each of whom states that he is a legal voter owning or occupying real estate situated within one mile of the proposed road, it is not therein specified whether such occupation is under the homestead or pre-emption laws, or under contract with the state, and the name of Fred Ware, who, it is claimed, owns a quarter section described in the petition as land over which the road passes, is omitted therefrom, aud cons-’quontly the contention is that the supervisors acquired no jur ^-dictiou to lay out a road. It is unquestionably true that the petition must substantially conform to the requirements of the statute with reference to naming the owners of land, if known, and such omission is doubtless a jurisdictional matter as far as parties not named are concerned; but, upon principle, appellant, who was named and is unprejudiced, should not have the power to overthrow a proceeding so universally beneficial as the laying out of a public road. According to the only practical doctrine, where there are many persons interested as owners, or occupants of different parcels of land, failure to name or give notice to one of them will not vitiate the entire proceeding; the better opinion in such cases being that the action of the supervisors
Assuming, as we evidently should, that the petition must be signed by six qualified persons, the mere failure to bring them all clearly within the statute by the descriptive diction of such petition is not considered a jurisdictional defect,rendering proceedings otherwise regular of no effect, when the proof shows that the required number of qualified persons actually signed the same. Elliott, Roads & S. 252; Inhabitants of Hyde Park v. County Com’rs of Norfolk, 117 Mass. 416; Forsythe v. Kreuter, 100 Ind. 27. As a matter of practice it is better to state upon the face of the petition facts showing the signers to be qualified, but the provision contains no such requirement, and competent proof showing that at least six of the signers answer the demands of the statute is all that is necessary. Bewley v. Graves (Or.) 20 Pac, 322, Stevens v. Board of
In the absence of any evidence to show .that “W. C. Elliott” and “Carl Curtis,” who signed the petition for a road, are the identical persons whose signatures are attached to certain proceedings of the board as “Warren Elliott” and “Carl L. Curtis,” it will not be presumed, for the purpose of defeating the action of the court, that two of the petitioners were supervisors of the township 1o whom the application was made, and there is no merit in the contention that the petition was not signed by at least six men possessing statutory qualifications. Therefore, the question whether the members of a board of supervisors can in any event be legal petitioners for a road, the establishment of which is a matter committed in part to their judgment, need not be determined, and our conclusion is that the petition was signed by the requisite number of qualified persons, namely, W. C. Elliott, Carl Cur;is, Lewis Diehl, S. N. Brown, H. B. Brown, C. P. Stanley, and Calvin Curtis.
Section 1302 of the Compiled Laws requires a just award of damages to each individual claimant therefor, and in maning such adjustment the advantages and benfits that the new road will confer upon such claimant, as well as the disadvantages that he will sustain, must be taken into consideration. In this instance the road extends one mile across the west side of appellants land, taking a strip two rods in width for the entire distance; and he was not permitted to show that the appropriation was of any disadvantage to him beyond the value of the land actually taken, although questions going to the true measure of damages were propounded to his witnesses, and respondent’s witnesses were allowed to testify to the effect
As no evidence was introduced tending in the slightest degree to justify an inference that the proposed road would be of
Consonant with natural justice*and the courts as well, the doctrine seems to be that without remuneration there cannot be “due process of law,” and, while the legislature may compel the citizen to sell his property, there must be compensation. To make one whose property is seized pay for a public benefit which all the people alike secure, and for which none but himself is required to sustain injury, would be inequitable, and not within the intention of the legislature when it authorized the supervisors to estimate the advantages and disadvantages in settling the question of damages. If it be true that by reason of this road appellant’s farm is made liable to injury from water accumulating thereon to an extent that it would interfere •with his getting from one portion thereof to another, he should have been permitted to show that fact as an element of damage, •and it was erroneous to sustain an objection to the introduction of any evidence of that character, and to instruct the jury with reference thereto in the manner disclosed by the record. The bill of rights declares that “private property shall not be taken for public use, or damaged, without just compensation”; and the case of Railway Co. v. Anderson, 39 Ark. 168, is in point.
By the conflicting instructions, as well as such as were not based on any evidence introduced at the trial, and are not good law if considered as abstract propositions, the jury appears to have been misled to the prejudice of appellant, and the judgment appealed from is therefore reversed, and a new trial ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Bockoven v. Board of Sup'rs. of Lincoln Tp., Clark County
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- 4 cases
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- Syllabus
- 1. Under Comp. Laws, §§ 1296-1298, giving the board of supervisors jurisdiction to lay out highway's and award compensation for the land appropriated for that purpose, on the filing of a petition with the board, signed by at least six legal voters who are owners of land or occupanls under the homestead or pre-emption laws of the United States, or under contract from the state, situated within one mile from the proposed road, a petition signed by ten persons is sufficient, without designating-how they held their land, although some of them were not qualified, where it appeared that six of them were competent. 2. Under Comp. Laws, §§ 1296-1298, requiring- a petition to be filed with the board of supervisors, signed by six legal voters who own land or occupy it under the homestead or pre-emption laws Of the United States, situated within one mile of the proposed highway, in order to confer jurisdiction on the board to condemn land for such highway, the fact that two signers of a petition wore W. C. E. and Carl O., and Warren E. and Carl L. C. are members of the board, will not invalidate the proceedings, in the absence of proof that the signers of the petition and the members of the board were the same persons. 3. An instruction that any benefit which the owner would derive from the establishment of a highway should be deducted from the damages allowed for his land taken for such highway was erroneous, in the absence of evidence that he would secure any benefit. 4. An instruction that, where an owner comes in and claims his land is very valuable, it is no hardship for valuable farms to contribute to good roads, was erroneous, as prejudicial to the defendant. 5. An instruction that the court will sanction any verdict the jury may return was erroneous, since it left more to lay men than the law justifies. 6. Under the bill of rights, providing that private property shall not be taken for public use or damaged without just compensation, and Comp. Laws, § 1302, which requires a just award of damages to be made to each individual claimant whose land is appropriated for a public highway, an instruction that the necessity of maintaining a fence along- the proposed highway to prevent cattle from injuring crops, and the injury which might accrue from water flowing back from the grade of the highway,were merely speculative injuries, for which the defendant was not entitled to damages, and an instruction that, although such matters were merely speculative, they should be considered by the jury in estimating the damages, were conflicting and erroneous.