Bolles v. City of Montpelier

108 A. 565, 93 Vt. 513, 1920 Vt. LEXIS 160
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 7, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 108 A. 565 (Bolles v. City of Montpelier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bolles v. City of Montpelier, 108 A. 565, 93 Vt. 513, 1920 Vt. LEXIS 160 (Vt. 1920).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

The petitioners applied to the city council of Montpelier to lay a highway from Tremont Street, so called, in the city of Montpelier, along a route known as Guernsey Avenue Extension, to a house which was then being constructed by them. The length of the proposed street was about ten rods, and crossed land belonging to the estate of George Guernsey and land of Martin Shields and wife, upon which H. C. Shurtleff held a mortgage. The city council refused to establish the highway, and this petition was brought to the county court. Commissioners were appointed, and after a full hearing and examination of the premises they found and reported that the public good and the convenience of individuals required that the proposed highway [515]*515be laid out substantially as prayed for in tbe petition; that they had caused the highway to be surveyed, giving a detailed description of their survey; that they found, and so recommended to the court, that the roadway should be graded in a certain manner set forth in the report; that in so doing no bank wall should be constructed on the northerly side of the highway; that a plank walk should be constructéd of a given width; that the highway be graded and ready for public travel within one year from the acceptance of the report; and that it be completely graded and filled for twenty feet in width, and suitably gravelled or covered with cinders, on or before three years from the date of the order of the court establishing the highway.

The parties interested in the Shields land filed exceptions to the report. The case coming on for hearing, the court ordered the report recommitted on the question of damages ‘ ‘ and to give the landowners and city of Montpelier an opportunity to appear before the commissioners in reference to land damages and survey made, so they may cross-examine the surveyor and his plan. ’ ’ The recommittal on the question of damages was ordered to correct'an irregularity in the proceedings. The parties had been fully heard on the question, but before the decision and survey contemplated in G-. L. 4423, and no further evidence was offered relating to damages at the rehearing. With reference to the survey and plan, when the commissioners had reached their decision after the original hearing, they employed the city engineer to make a survey and plan of the highway. This plan was attached and referred to in their report. It was objected that the survey was made ‘ ‘ and the plan received in evidence ’ ’ when neither the landowners nor their counsel were present, and outside any hearing in the case. It was to meet this objection, though evidently frivolous, that the recommittal with reference to the survey and plan was made. The commissioners were well within their rights respecting the survey, and the plan was not “received in evidence. ’ ’ It was used merely as a matter of convenience in making their report.

At the rehearing, full opportunity was given the city and the objecting landowners to cross-examine the city engineer with reference to his survey and the plan, but the examiner sought to go further and inquire of him concerning matters not appearing upon the plan, especially with reference to the feasibility of other routes to reach the petitioners’ house. This the commis[516]*516sioners denied, ruling that it was outside the scope of the recommittal. Several exceptions were taken to the action of the commissioners in thus limiting the cross-examination. On the supplemental report being filed, the same parties filed additional exceptions to the reports, a motion to set aside the report and an alternative motion to recommit to other commissioners. The court overruled the exceptions and the several motions, accepted the report of the commissioners as amended, and ordered the highway established ‘ ‘ according to the provisions of said report. ’ ’ The petitioners were ordered to pay the damages assessed against them within sixty days from the date of the order. The cause was passed to this Court on exceptions by the city and the landowners.

For convenience we will speak of the excepting parties as the petitionees. They brief certain exceptions to evidence received by the commissioners, exceptions to the exclusion of evidence at the rehearing, exceptions to the failure of the commissioners to comply with certain requests, and exceptions to the action of the court in overruling their motions and accepting the report. It will facilitate the consideration of these questions to notice at the outset the peculiar features of a proceeding of this character, and the limitations upon the review of questions arising therein in this Court.

The statute provides in substance that, on the neglect or refusal of the selectmen of a town (or the corresponding officers of a city) to lay out a requested highway, application can be made to the county court for that purpose. On such application, unless cause is shown to the contrary, the court is required to appoint commissioners to examine the premises and inquire into the convenience and necessity of the highway. If the commissioners decide that such highway ought to be laid out, it is made their duty to cause the same to be surveyed and to proceed to determine the question of damages. When the commissioners have completed their inquiries they are required to malee report to the court, stating their doings and decision, with their survey and appraisal of damages, if any. The town (or city) or any person interested can appear and resist the acceptance of the report by showing any facts relevant to the question. The court is empowered, for sufficient reasons, to reject the report, or to accept it in whole or in part, and, if accepted, to make an order establishing the highway and render judgment respecting the [517]*517damages and costs. <3. L. 4419-4429. Such, in substance, has been the procedure since the earliest time, except for about three years between 1828 and 1831, when these matters were committed to a board of county road commissioners.

The provision for review on exceptions was enacted in 1872 by an act entitled “An Act allowing questions of law arising upon the trial of road cases to pass to the Supreme Court for final decision.” It was therein provided that no judgment of the county court in such matters should be reversed, unless the Supreme Court would have granted a writ of certiorari for the same cause. No. 38, Acts of 1872. The scope of the statute has since been enlarged, but the limitation remains unchanged. (3. L. 2257. Before the enactment of this statute questions of law arising in such eases as the one at bar were usually brought to the attention of the Supreme Court by petition for a writ of certiorari.

Construing these statutes, this Court has held: That the report of the commissionérs establishing a highway is not binding upon the court, and is only prima facie evidence of a legal necessity for its establishment, and that on objections to the report the court will inquire into and determine for itself, upon proper evidence taken and produced before it, whether the commissioners have arrived at a just and proper conclusion. Gray v. Middletown, 56 Vt. 53. That the propriety and necessity of establishing a highway in a particular place is one of fact, which in the last resort is to be determined exclusively by the county court. Gallup v. Woodstock, 29 Vt. 347. That on exceptions in this class of cases the judgment of the county court is no.t to be reversed unless it is made to appear that substantial injustice has been done to the excepting party. Hancock v. Worcester, 62 Vt. 106, 18 Atl.

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Bluebook (online)
108 A. 565, 93 Vt. 513, 1920 Vt. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bolles-v-city-of-montpelier-vt-1920.