Barden v. State

152 N.W. 330, 98 Neb. 180, 1915 Neb. LEXIS 181
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1915
DocketNo. 18751
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 152 N.W. 330 (Barden v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barden v. State, 152 N.W. 330, 98 Neb. 180, 1915 Neb. LEXIS 181 (Neb. 1915).

Opinions

Sedgwick, J.

The defendant, who is plaintiff in error here, was found guilty in the district court for Otoe county on the charge of nuisance by obstructing a public highway, and has brought the case to this court by petition in error.

1. The defendant filed a plea in abatement in which he alleged that he had no preliminary hearing on the com[182]*182plaint filed against Mm in the county court, for the reason that the appointment of W. W. Wilson as special acting county judge of Otoe county, Nebraska, “is void, for the reason that no bond was required of him as required by law, and that he did not qualify as required by law by giving a bond.” It is not stated in the brief, and we have not observed, that the record shows that any objection was made to the qualification of this special county judge at the preliminary or until this plea in abatement was filed in the district court. The statute requires such specially appointed officers to give bond, but it is not necessary in this case to determine whether the failure to give such bond would disqualify him to act if timely objection had been made. It seems clear under the authorities that, unless such objection is made before the conclusion of the. hearing, the judge so appointed must be regarded as an officer de facto. Constantineau, Public Officers and the De-Facto Doctrine, sec. 137; In re Hewes, 62 Kan. 288; Tower v. Whip, 53 W. Va. 158.

2. There are several assignments of error in the brief, but we find it necessary only to consider one of them. The record shows that in 1871 a petition was filed with the county board of Otoe county asking for the opening of a road on the section line east of the land now owned by the defendant. The county board appointed a commissioner to locate the road. The commissioner reported to the county board that he had surveyed the location of the road, and the field notes of his survey are included in his report. These field notes show a bend in the road surveyed encroaching upon the lands in question then owned hy the defendant’s grantor. There was no hearing before the county board, no order made opening the road and defining its limits, and, of course, no damages paid the owner of this land. The evidence also shows that the road was thereafter used by the traveling public and has continued to be a much traveled road until the present time. About a year before this prosecution was begun, the defendant built the fence along the east side of his land, and it is charged in the information that this fence infringed [183]*183upon the public highway. A bend of a creek extended across the section line, and the commissioner had made the survey around this bend along the plaintiff’s land. The defendant contended that he had placed this fence well within his own land so as to leave the whole of the public highway unobstructed, and this is the question of fact upon which his guilt or innocence depends.

It would seem that if the field notes of the commissioner are intelligible, as they are alleged by the prosecution to be, there would have been no difficulty in establishing beyond question how far the road, which was surveyed by the commissioner and adopted by the public, extended from the section line into the defendant’s land. The distance from the section line of the fence which the defendant erected could also be established by actual measurement. There was no attempt at definite and exact evidence upon these points. The prosecution would ask a witness whether the defendant’s fence infringed upon the road, and when the witness answered that he had been along there some years before, but paid no attention to the matter and could not state how far, he was asked and allowed to give his best judgment. Under such circumstances we have all manner of estimates in regard to the distance.

Mr. Fritz Hillman was a witness for the prosecution. His evidence is perhaps as definite and reliable as any. He had been acquainted with the road for 40 years, and had traveled over it “thousands of times.” He testified: “When I first knew it, I didn’t know exactly where it was. Afterwards it was farther west, probably six or eight or ten rods, something in that neighborhood, from one back to another. That was prairie at that time, as near as I can recollect. Then the man that owned it broke up that bottom, and he naturally crowded the road back to the creek. Whether he did that or the neighbors, I don’t know. Whoever traveled it there at that time crowded the road back to the creek where this little bend comes now. As long .as I can recollect, there has been trouble right, there. At that time it was sloping down towards the creek. Whoever did it, I don’t know; somebody worked it and leveled that off [184]*184so that it went slanting pretty close to the edge of the «reek. When first I knew it, it was kind of slanting. We always had to watch out or our wagons would slide dowm into the creek. Q. Now, how has it been as to slant since the road has been worked? A. It is pretty much level. Q. Now, state where the road was from the time you knew it up to the present time with reference to the section line at this bend. A. The section line that runs straight through — why, the edge of the bank, the west edge from the creek bank, was probably eight or ten feet farther west, about two rods that would be in the road, about two rods that left belonging to the road; it was probably eight or ten feet, in my judgment, from the edge of the bank up farther west. * * * Q. State the condition of the road about 30 years ago, and what it was three or four years ago with reference to this bend. A. It was just the same, only it was worked a little — made it a little smoother and leveler. Three or four years ago it was just the same as it was 30 years ago, only in a little better condition. Q. State as to the locations 20 years ago and three or four years ago. A. I said it was about the same. I didn’t see any difference; if there was any difference it was very little. I didn’t notice it. Q. Now, state if there is any difference in the west bank of this bend; state if there is any difference in the west bank of this bend now and 30 years ago. A. Yes; it had been worked down. Q. Tell the jury the difference in the location. A. There is no difference in the location, only that the bank is worked down, that I know of. Q. State whether or not the edge of the bank along this bend is where it was 30 years ago, or whether it is farther east than it was 30 years ago. A. I think it’s practically the same, only it’s been worked down now; that’s all the difference I could see.” On cross-examination he testified: “Q:. The road now is on the section line, is it not? A. Well, somebody worked it. The last couple of years they drove through the ditch ; they have filled that up now, and it’s on the section line now. Q. How long have they been working on it, you say a couple of years on the section line? A. No; I didn’t [185]*185say that. Q. Well, about how long? A. A week or two ago. Q. They drove through on the section line a couple of years ago? A. Yes, sir. (The remainder of the answer to this question was stricken out.) Q. When was the first time you traveled over this road? A. In the fall of 1873. Q. Was the road on the section line then? A. No, sir; there was no bend there, it was on both ends where the two banks, these two creeks were. Q. But not at the bank? A. Not where that bend was in the road, no. Q. When did that bend get back to the bank? A. Several years afterwards. At that time it was farther west. Q. Farther west than the bank? A. Six or seven rods, something like that. Q.

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Bluebook (online)
152 N.W. 330, 98 Neb. 180, 1915 Neb. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barden-v-state-neb-1915.