Clarke v. Mayo
Clarke v. Mayo
Opinion of the Court
The district court appears to have proceeded upon the ground, that there was no record of an order establishing the road. But there is nothing, in the act of assembly, which prevents the court from accepting a road tendered by the party; who may, if he thinks proper, waive the usual formalities, and renounce the benefit of the statute. The record shews, that the road was opened and used; that viewers were directed to inspect and report upon it; and that a surveyor was shortly afterwards appointed; all affording irresistible evidence, either that a report was made; or what is more probable, that it was dispensed with, because the road was offered by the owner: And had the order of 1761 recited the transactions, and stated that the appointment of a surveyor was made without waiting for the report, because the proprietor of the land, by petitioning for the road, bad, necessarily, assented to the establishment of it, the appellee would have been estopped from controverting the public right: But it is the same thing, in effect, when it is inferrible from the proceedings, that one or the other must have happened; for then presumption supplies the averment; especially as the welfare of the community requires, that a public easement long sanctioned by the proper authority, and acquiesced in for nearly forty years, should not be disturbed by a rigid, or critical, construction, of the words of an order defective, probably, from the inadvertence of the clerk. To put down a road, under these circumstances, would tend to ensnare third persons, and injure the public interest, upon technical exceptions, not fit to be sustained. Viewing the case, therefore, with that libe
Concurring Opinion
This case stands upon very different ground from that of an application for a new road. For the road here had, previously, been opened by W. Mayo the proprietor for the use of the community j and the application to establish it as a public highway was made by himself: the appointment of a surveyor therefore was, necessarily, sanctioned by him s and that was sufficient. For it is not, as the counsel of the appellant supposed, on account of the public, but of the owner, that the formalities in the statute are prescribed. If he chooses to waive them, he may; and, if the court approve of the road, all they have to do is to accept of it; which, in the present case, was done by appointing the surveyor. I concur, therefore, that the judgment of the district court should be reversed, and the order of the county court affirmed.
Lyons, Judge. In 1760, Mayo petitioned for the road, and viewers were appointed, but no report was made; and it does not appear, that any further proceedings were ever had upon the petition, which was probably dropt, as there is no order of court establishing the road. It was said, however, that it might have been a road prior to the year 1748; but that idea is refuted by the petition in 1760; for why petition for the establishment of it, at that time, if it was a road before ? It was next urged, that the constant habit of appointing surveyors shews that it was a public highway. To which I answer, in the first place, that if there had been such a habit, the appointments would have been nugatory,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.