County of Canyon v. Toole

69 P. 320, 8 Idaho 501, 1902 Ida. LEXIS 40
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 69 P. 320 (County of Canyon v. Toole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Canyon v. Toole, 69 P. 320, 8 Idaho 501, 1902 Ida. LEXIS 40 (Idaho 1902).

Opinion

QDARLES, C. J.

— This action was commenced by the appellant, as. plaintiff, to condemn a strip of land belonging to the respondent, J. J. Toole, twenty-five feet wide and one-half mile long, and another strip of land belonging to the respondent, J. L. Johnson, twenty-five feet wide and one-half mile long. The complaint alleges the corporate existence of the appellant county, after which the allegations in said complaint are as follows:

“1. That the county of Canyon, plaintiff herein, is a municipal corporation, created and existing by virtue of the laws of Idaho.

[504]*504“2. That on April 5, 1899, there was filed with the clerk of the board of county commissioners of said county a petition for the opening of a public road in road district No. 1 in the said county from a point on the center of the south line of section 14; and from thence running in a northerly direction one and one-half miles to the center of section 11; thence in an easterly direction one-half mile to the center of the east line of said section; thence in a northerly direction one-half mile to the northeast corner of the said section; and thence in an easterly direction one and one-eighth miles to the intersection of the present county road, as shown on the plat attached hereto, and marked Exhibit ‘A,’ and signed by a number of more than ten residents and taxpayers of the said road district. That the said petition set forth and particularly described the said proposed road, and the owners of the land through which the said proposed road would run, and the probable cost, necessity, •and advantages of the same, and that the said petition was accompanied with a good and sufficient bond.

“3. That thereafter, and on April 10, 1899, at the regular meeting of the said board, the said petition was regularly considered, and found to be proper in form and in substance, and on motion an order appointing three proper persons to view and survey the said proposed route, and submit their report to the said board, was duly made.

“4. That thereafter, and on April 7, 1900, the said viewers filed with the clerk of the said board their report, showing that, after first having been duly sworn to discharge their duties faithfully, they had viewed and surveyed the proposed road over the most practicable route, and had notified all the owners of the land over which it passed of the fact, and obtained the written consent to give the right of way from all of the said land owners, except G. W. Shurtliff, W. W. Stone, H. H. Kelly, E. Stuart, and J. J. Toole, and had estimated the damage to the nonconsenting land owners at thirty-five dollars, twenty-five dollars, twenty-five dollars, seventy-five dollars, and seventy-five dollars, respectively, and had estimated the total cost of [505]*505constructing the said road at $485, and had recommended the said road over the said route, as appears by the said plat.

“5. That thereafter, and on July 19, 1900, at the regular meeting of the said board the said petition and said report came on regularly for hearing, and on motion it was duly ordered that the eleventh day of September, 1900, be set for the time for hearing the said petition and considering the said report, and that the clerk give legal notice to all noneonsenting land owners, and to all persons interested in same, of the said facts.

“6. That thereafter, and on September 11, 1900, the said matter came on regularly for hearing as ordered, at the appointed time, and the said board found from the evidence that written notice had been duly served upon all of the nonconsenting land owners ten days prior to the said day fixed for the hearing of the said report, and that it was necessary for the said board of commissioners to make a personal examination and observation of the said proposed road; and upon motion it was duly ordered that the further hearing of the said matter be continued to the regular meeting of the said board on October 9, 1900.

“1. That thereafter, and on October 9, 1900, the further hearing of the said matter came on regularly as appointed before the board, and the evidence of all parties, and of all nonconsenting land owners personally, was heard and considered, and, after due deliberation and consideration of all the evidence and facts, it was found that the said road was a necessity and great public benefit; and on motion it was duly ordered by the said board that the said report be approved, and the said petition be granted.

“8. That thereafter, and on January-, 1901, at the regular meeting of the said board, upon suggestion, it was ordered that February 25, 1901, be fixed as the time for further considering the said petition and report; and the clerk of the said board was ordered to give legal notice to all nonconsenting land owners and all persons interested in the said proposed road of the said meeting, and the purposes thereof.

[506]*506“9. That thereafter, and on February 25, 1901, the said matter came on regularly for hearing as ordered, at the appointed time, and all of the nonconsenting land owners appeared, and it appeared to the said board that all persons interested had been duly notified, and further evidence was heard and considered; and after due deliberation, and consideration of all the evidence and the facts, it was found that the said road was a necessity and great public benefit, and on motion it was duly ordered by the said board that the former action on October 9, 1900, approving the said report and granting the said petition, be reaffirmed, and the said report be reapproved, and the amount of damages estimated by the said viewers be retendered to the nonconsenting land owners, and the said tender be kept good, and that in case the said sums, or either of them, be refused, the attorney for the county should institute proceedings by law to procure the said road.

"10. That all of the nonconsenting land owners have accepted and have been paid the said sums so estimated by the said viewers, excepting the said J. J. Toole and E. Stuart, and that the said E. Stuart had transferred all of her right and title in and to the said southwest one-quarter of section 14, township 9 north, range 5 west of Boise meridian, as shown on the said plat, to one J. L. Johnson, one of the above-named defendants herein, after the said report of the said viewers was made.

"11. That the road supervisor of the said road district tendered the said sum of seventy-five dollars to each of the said defendants on the second day of March, 1901, and has at all times been and now is, ready to pay the same, but that the said defendants each refused, and now refuses, to accept the said offer.

“12. That all of the persons owning land over which the said proposed road passes who now still refuse to give the said right of way are the said J. J. Toole and the said J. L. Johnson, defendants herein, and that the land owned by the said J. J. Toole, over which the said proposed road passes, is [507]*507the southeast one-quarter of section 14 in the said township and range, and the portion of the said land necessary for the said proposed road is a strip of land twenty-five feet wide and one-half mile long on the west side of the said quarter section, and that the land owned by the said J. L.

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Related

On Rehearing
94 P. 1029 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1908)
Meservey v. Gulliford
93 P. 780 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1908)
Canyon County v. Toole
75 P. 609 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
69 P. 320, 8 Idaho 501, 1902 Ida. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-canyon-v-toole-idaho-1902.