Comm'rs' Count of Lowndes Co. v. Bowie

34 Ala. 461
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 34 Ala. 461 (Comm'rs' Count of Lowndes Co. v. Bowie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Comm'rs' Count of Lowndes Co. v. Bowie, 34 Ala. 461 (Ala. 1859).

Opinion

A. J. WALKER, C. J.

The appellee objects, at the threshold of this ease, that the court of county commissioners cannot prosecute an appeal to this court. In the Commissioners’ Court of Talladega County v. Thompson, [463]*46315 Ala. 134, it was decided, in a controversy as to the establishment of a road, that a writ of error might be taken in the name of the commissioners’ court; and in the Commissioners’ Court of Russell County v. Tarver, 25 Ala. 480, this court took jurisdiction of an appeal by the commissioners’ court in asimilar controversy. These decisions are conclusive, in favor of the right of the court of county commissioners to appeal from a judgment of the circuit court, reversing an order of the court of county commissioners for the establishment or change of a public road.

[2.] Three things are requisite to give the court of county commissioners jurisdiction over the matter of the change or establishment of a public road. Those things are, an application to the court, thirty days notice of the application, given by advertisement at the court-house door and at three other public places in the county, and the location of the road within the county. An order establishing or changing a road can only be sustained, when those three facts affirmatively appear from the record. — Commissioners’ Court of Talladega v. Thompson, 15 Ala. 134; S. C., 18 ib. 694; Code, §§ 1131, 1132.

The minutes of the court of 3d November, 1856, affirm that on that day one Robertson presented a petition, subscribed by himself and forty-two others. The petition is copied on the record, and prays the specified change iti a public i’oad. It thus appears affirmatively from the record, that the application contemplated by section 1131 of the Code was made.

[3.] The minutes of the same date also affirm, that? it appeared by proof made that thirty days notice of the application had been given, by advertisement posted up at the court-house door and at three other public places in Lowndes county, according to law. This assertion of the record shows a literal compliance with section 1132 of the Code, in the matter of notice. It is objected to this apparently full and sufficient assertion of the record, that it fails to show by whom the notice was signed, or what it contained, or how long it remained posted up, or at what places it was posted up. The contents of the [464]*464notice sufficiently appear in the assertion that notice of the application was given. It was only necessary that there should be notice of the application. There was no necessity for a designation of the public places at which the notices were posted up; it is enough that they were posted up at public places- The 'statute does not specifically direct by whom the- notices should be signed. It would be a criticism upon the recoi’d, unfair and unnecessarily severe, for us to intend, either that the notice was so signed as not to-give-a fair manifestation to the community of the intended application, or that the notice, after being posted up, was pulled down, so as to prevent the fair and bona-fide notification intended by the law. "We do not wish, however, to be understood as intimating, that the notice would be vitiated, even if the advertisements stuck up at public places had been pulled down.

The petition for the change of the road, and the written application of the appellee to be made a contesting party, and the minutes of the court, at February term, 1857, all show that the road was in Lowndes county. It .thus appears, that all three of the requisite jurisdictional facts are affirmatively shown by the record.

:[4.] Several objections to the petition were made before the.-court of county commissioners, by way of demurrer, and the demurrer was formally overruled. Upon the question of the expediency of opening or altering a public road, that court exercises a gwasi-legislative authority, and its decision is not revisable. Tn the exercise of that authority, it does not act alone upon evidence produced according to legal rules, but is guided, to some extent, by its knowledge of the geography of the county, the wants and wishes of the people, and the ability of the-neighborhood to keep the road in repair. — Hill v. Bridges, 6 Port. 197 ; West River Bridge v. Dix, 16 Verm. 446 ; Hollins v. Patterson, 6 Leigh, 457; 6 Wend. 564; 10 Pick. 358 ; 4 Halst. 209.

[5.] It is impossible, therefore, to prescribe any state of facts, which, being alleged and proved, give to the applicant a legal right to have a public road opened or altered. The law pronounces no judgment upon allega[465]*465tions made, for or against an application; and pleading would, therefore, be altogether out of place. The law neither requires the court to grant an application, because of the fullness and sufficiency of the allegations of the petition, nor to refuse it because of their insufficiency. 'The court acts upon its convictions of expediency and policy. The petition required by section 1182 of the Code is not pleading upon which the proceeding is based. The law simply requires that it should be a petition for the establishment or alteration of the road. It is not necessary that it should contain any allegations, though it would be proper that it should state such facts as would seem .to make it politic to grant the prayer of the petition. The demurrer tdthe petition presented no issue which belonged to the cs,se, and it was totally immaterial what judgmeut the court pronounced upon it.

[6.] We cannot qustain the objection, that the taking by the viewers of tie oath prescribed in section 1134 of the Code is not shown by the record. The viewers sptgj in their report, that before acting under their commimn, they took before a deágnated justice of the peace mi omÉjf which conforms precisely to the requirement of statute. The taking of the oath by the viewers is a posed upon them ; and their report that they have raken it, must be deemed at least prima-facie evidence of the faet. It is a part of their proceedings under the appointment, and is, like the rest of their proceedings, a proper subject of report.

[7.] The record states, that the seven viewers were “ disinterested freeholders." The statute (Code, § 1133) requires that they should be “'disinterested householders.” The record, therefore, does not conform- to the statute in this, that it shows the appointment of “freeholders,” iustead of “ householders.” Tie requisition that householders should be appointed, goes to the regularity of the proceeding, and not to the jurisdiction of the court: it is not one of the matters upon which the jurisdiction depends, as appears in a previous part of this opinion. The contestant may, therefore, waive the objection, so far as he is concerned. At the time when the jury of viewers [466]*466was appointed, and thence forward, the party who carried the case by certiorari into the circuit court, was before the court of county commissioners as a contestant. Upon the return of the report, the contestant made three specific objections to it; bbut did not object on the ground that the viewers were not householders'. By the failure tó object iu the primary court that the viewers were not householders, the contestant waived the point.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ala. 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commrs-count-of-lowndes-co-v-bowie-ala-1859.