State ex rel. Limmix v. Supervisors of the Town of Clyde

Wisconsin Supreme Court
State ex rel. Limmix v. Supervisors of the Town of Clyde, 130 Wis. 159 (Wis. 1906)
109 N.W. 985; 1906 Wisc. LEXIS 23
Winslow

State ex rel. Limmix v. Supervisors of the Town of Clyde

Opinion of the Court

Winslow, J.

This is an action of certiorari brought to reverse an order of the defendant supervisors laying out a highway, and the relators appeal from the judgment affirming the order of the supervisors. Three contentions are made by appellants which will be briefly considered.

1. It is claimed that a previous application to lay out this same highway was denied by the supervisors within one year prior to action upon the present application, and hence that, under sec.. 1283, Stats. 1898, the supervisors had no power to lay out the highway. If the fact be as claimed the conclusion undoubtedly follows, but the previous application must of course be a valid application, i. e. one upon which a legal highway could bo laid out. It appears by the return that the alleged previous application described the proposed highway as commencing in the center of a certain highway in the town known as the Dodgeville road, “where it crosses, the north line of the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter” of section I, and that the notice of the meeting of' the supervisors to decide upon such application stated that they would meet at the starting point of the proposed highway as so described. It further appears that the starting point of the highway, as prayed for in the second application and as actually laid out, was described as a point “in the Dodgeville road on the north line of the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section 7.” The Dodgeville road runs north and south on the west line of the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section 7, and nowhere touches the noHheast quarter. So the first application named as the starting point of the proposed highway not only a point which had no existence, but which, if it had existence, must be at least half a mile distant from the starting point of the highway-proposed to be laid out under the second application. It appears by the record returned that the supervisors declined to act on the first application because of this defect in tfie petition and notice. The appellants now claim, however, that *162it was clearly apparent by tbe description of tbe proposed highway in the first application and the courses and distances that tbe word “northeast” was mistakenly inserted for “northwest,” that tbe mistake could deceive no one, and hence that the petition and notice were sufficient to enable tbe supervisors to act thereon and lay out substantially tbe highway which they did finally lay out finder the second application. We have been unable to take this view. The petition and notice are jurisdictional papers in an adversary proceeding. They must substantially comply with the statute in order to authorize action by the supervisors. All parties interested adversely to the proceeding had a right to demand that the notice should plainly state where the supervisors would meet to consider the application. A notice that the meeting was to be held in a quarter-section half a mile distant from the actual meeting place cannot be safely regarded as a compliance with this requirement, even though it be possible that careful reading might induce one to believe that a mistake had been made in the naming of the quarter-section. We think, therefore, that the supervisors had no jurisdiction to lay out the highway in question under the first application and notice, and hence that their refusal to act thereon did not amount to a refusal to lay out the highway or a decision against the application under either sec. 1283 or sec. 1269, Stats. 1898.

2. It appears that the highway as proposed in the second application was to cross in an irregular-course three forty-acre tracts in the town of Clyde and then connect with another proposed highway in the adjoining town of Wyoming, as to which proceedings to lay the same out were pending at the same time, so as to make a continuous road. The supervisors decided not to follow the proposed course through the middle forty-acre tract, but varied it a considerable distance to the north, and it is claimed that they had no power to make this variation. This court held in Neis v. Franzen, 18 Wis. 537, that upon an application to alter a highway the *163supervisors are not necessarily confined to tbe precise route named in tbe application, but might, if satisfied that tbe public interests so required, make a reasonable variation from such proposed route. Tbe same principle has been applied to a proceeding to lay out ,a drain with tbe proviso attached tbat tbe variation shall not depart so far as to constitute materially another and different line. Donnelly v. Decker, 58 Wis. 461, 17 N. W. 389. Tbe change here was not so great as to constitute tbe highway actually laid out a materially different highway from that named in the application. In the absence of any showing to the contrary it must be presumed that the variation was reasonable and required by the interests of the public.

3. It appears by the record that at the time fixed in the notice the supervisors met at the place fixed in the notice and held a joint meeting with the supervisors of the town of Wyoming to consider such application and that afterwards they decided to lay out the highway. It is said that the statute -does not authorize a joint meeting, and that the fact that such a meeting was held vitiates the proceeding. It is true there is no statute authorizing the two boards to meet jointly. Had it appeared that the two boards acted as one body in deciding the application there would be grave doubt whether the decision could be sustained, because the town board of the town of Clyde alone has the power to lay out the highway. But it does not so appear. The record simply states that the two boards met together to consider the application. This was natural, because proceedings were then pending to lay out the balance of the proposed highway in the town of Wyoming, and, unless that was also laid out, the highway in the town of Clyde would be of no value. It was entirely proper for the defendant supervisors to ascertain whether the Wyoming part of the highway was in fact to be laid out, and jt seems quite obvious that this was the purpose of the joint consideration. 'The record does not, however, show that action was taken by *164the joint body. On the contrary, it states that after such consideration the road was in fact laid out by the town board of the tpwn of Clyde. The judgment of affirmance was therefore right.

By the Court. — Judgment is affirmed.

Reference

Full Case Name
State ex rel. Limmix and another v. Supervisors of the Town of Clyde
Cited By
1 case
Status
Published