State ex rel. Wills v. Larkin
State ex rel. Wills v. Larkin
Opinion of the Court
Tbe judgment appealed from awards a peremptory writ of mandamus to tbe supervisors of tbe town of Hazel Green, in Grant county, commanding them to lay out a highway therein described. On September 1, 1911, the relator, together with more than six other freeholders of tbe town of Hazel Green, made application in writing to tbe supervisors of that town to lay out' the highway in question. On tbe next day the supervisors gave notice that they would meet at tbe southeast corner of tbe southwest quarter of tbe southeast quarter of section 1, town 1, range 1 west, being at tbe east end of said proposed highway, on September 25, 1911, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon of that day, and decide upon such application. They did meet at the time mentioned at a farm house ten or twelve rods from the corner mentioned and decided against the application. One of the petitioners within thirty days after such decision applied in
This petitioner made several requests upon the supervisors thereafter to proceed and lay out the highway pursuant to the decision of the last mentioned commissioners. The supervisors refused and neglected to lay out the highway. Two members of the town board retired and two others were elected in their places at the town meeting of April, 1912, and on April 27, 1912, this petitioner demanded of the new board, the present appellant's, that they proceed to lay out the highway/ which they refused, whereupon the relator, another of the petitioners, procured the alternative writ' of mandamus which instituted this action. A motion t'o quash the alternative writ was denied, the appellants thereafter made return to such writ, and this return was treated as if it were at issue by answer or replication. Testimony was taken on such issue, consisting mostly of the. records and files of the three several proceedings mentioned. The appellants of
Error is assigned upon the grounds that the relator, having appealed from the decision of the supervisors to a justice of the peace to appoint commissioners to review that decision, was not entitled to a subsequent appeal to the county judge for the purpose of reviewing the determination of the commissioners,» that the supervisors lost jurisdiction by failing to meet at the place designated in the notice of meeting to hear and decide upon the application; that the testimony offered to show the character of the country through which the proposed highway would pass and the cost of such highway and the desire of the people of Hazel Green with reference to laying out the highway was excluded.
In support of the first assignment of error it is contended that, construing sees. 1276 and 1281, Stats., together, it is apparent that the petitioner was given an election to appeal to a justice of the peace from the decision of the supervisors, or to the county judge, and having applied to a justice of the peace in the first instance, np subsequent appeal from the determination of the first commissioners can be entertained. We think this contention inconsistent with the decision in State ex rel. Vos v. Hoelz, 69 Wis. 84, 33 N. W. 597. These statutes have stood a long time on the statute books, and more than twenty-five years ago received the construction given them in the case mentioned, when it was considered that they called for distinct qmsi-judicial determinations, not a series of appeals from the same decision, and this we
The mere fact that the supervisors sought shelter or convenience in a house ten or twelve rods from the mathematical point of meeting described in the notice could mislead no seeker in good faith for the place of meeting, and this place was in substantial accord with the notice.
The time to show the character of the country through which the road would pass and the wishes of the people of Hazel Green was when the commissioners met, and the tribunal to which such considerations should be offered was the commissioners. When the latter rendered and filed their decision such inquiry was closed, and'the statute (sec. 1282.) makes it the duty of the supervisors to 1-ay out the road. They have no discretion in the matter at this stage of proceedings. State ex rel. Curtis v. Geneva, 107 Wis. 1, 9, 82 N. W. 550; Williams v. Mitchell, 49 Wis. 284, 290, 5 N. W. 798.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.