Crosby v. Hanover

36 N.H. 404
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJanuary 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 N.H. 404 (Crosby v. Hanover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crosby v. Hanover, 36 N.H. 404 (N.H. 1858).

Opinion

Eastman, J.

This petition is for a highway in the town of Hanover. It was first presented to the selectmen of the town, and, upon their refusal to lay out the road, it was presented to the Common Pleas, and by that court referred to the commissioners of the county.

The highway petitioned for begins at the westerly end of a highway in Hanover, and terminates at the easterly line of the State of Yermont, at or near the westerly end of the toll-bridge across Connecticut river, as it was before it was destroyed by fire. These termini are within the limits of the State and of the town ; this State being bounded westerly by the west bank of the Connecticut and the State of Yermont, and the town having for its western boundary the same line.

Originally the Province of New-Hampshire was regarded by the authorities who made the grants as embracing the territory now constituting the State of Yermont. Both sides of the Connecticut were granted about the same time. By a subsequent decision of the sovereign in England, New-Hampshire was limited to the west bank of the Connecticut; and by the statute which is now in force, and which has been for a series of years, the northerly and southerly lines of the towns adjoining the Connecticut river are extended across the river, to the westerly line of the State, and the west line of the State is declared to be the western boundary of the towns. Rev. Stat., chap. 37, sec. 1.

Over the limits and boundaries of towns the legislature have entire control, and any change in those limits is binding at once. State v. Canterbury, 28 N. H. (8 Foster) 218 ; Bristol v. New-Chester, 3 N. H. 524.

Such change is territorial merely, and does not of course affect any rights in private property; so that, whatever may be the rights of individuals owning lands upon the river or islands in the river, or however the lines of the towns may have been originally, the State, extending to the western bank, and the legislature having bounded the towns upon the river by thé same line, the western boundary of Hanover is the eastern line [414]*414of Vermont, and the western bank of the river. Consequently, the termini of the petition are within the limits of the town, as established by law; the eastern terminus being the end of a road in the town, and the western one being the eastern line of Vermont, which is the western line of the town.

The statement in the petition that the western terminus is at or near the westerly end of the toll bridge, as it was before it was destroyed by fire, is merely descriptive of the place where the line of the State is. It is the line of the State which is fixed as the terminus, and that is described as at or near the westerly end of the toll bridge.

The petition, therefore, having been for a highway within the town, and having been refused by the selectmen, was properly presented to the Common Pleas, and of it that court had jurisdiction. Rev. Stat., chap. 50, sec. 1.

•The question of the jurisdiction of the court over this petition is not embarrassed, as counsel have urged, by the decision in Griffin’s Petition, 27 N. H. (7 Foster) 343. In that case the petition was for a highway in Hudson, and stated that it was a part of a more extended highway required by the public good to be laid out over lands in Hudson and Londonderry, two adjoining towns. The petition, having been first presented to the selectmen of Hudson, and declined by them, was afterwards presented to the Common Pleas ; and it was held, that selectmen have no authority to lay a highway in their town, where such highway forms but a part of a highway extending into another town, the whole of which, if any, is required for the public accommodation; and hence, that a petition to the Court of Common Pleas, founded on the refusal of the selectmen to lay such part of a road, cannot be sustained ; that, the jurisdiction of the Common Pleas depending upon the action of the selectmen, and the petition itself showing that they had no power to act, there was no foundation upon which the jurisdiction of the court could rest.

The power to lay out highways from town to town is given exclusively to the court of Common Pleas, and selectmen have no [415]*415jurisdiction as to those parts of such highways as lie within their limits. The commissioners of the county, who have the wants of the public and the interests of the several towns before them at one and the same time, are to be the judges of the propriety of laying out a highway which is to be made by two or more towns, and not the selectmen of any one town ; and applications in such cases are to be made in the first instance directly to the court, and the petitions referred to the commissioners, as provided by statute. Such is the doctrine of Griffin’s Case.

But the facts in that case are not parallel with those of the present. This petition is for a highway in one town only. It is not for a part of a more extended highway, leading from town to town within the limits of this State, as was the case in Griffin’s Petition. This application shows no such fact, and the evidence furnished does not show it. There is no town beyond Hanover on the west in this State in which a road could be established by our authorities. When we pass over the west line of Hanover we go at once into Yermont, where we have no jurisdiction whatever. And although this highway may be connected with another 'which has been made in that State, or which may hereafter be made, yet it cannot, in any proper sense, be said to be a road from town to town, or in two or more towns, as the terms are used in our statute. Beyond doubt, those terms refer to towns within our own limits.

If the court cannot obtain jurisdiction of this case by the presentation of the petition to the selectmen, and their neglect or refusal to act, then they can have jurisdiction of no case in a town bordering upon an adjoining State, where the highway is a part of one running into such State. Take the towns lying upon the borders of Massachusetts and Maine, where there are no natural boundaries between the States, but the roads run from one State into the other, in the same manner as though the adjoining towns in the respective States were in the interior of this State, it is manifest that the only way in which such roads can be legally laid out in this State, is, first, to present the petitions to the selectmen, and then, if they refuse, to bring them before [416]*416the court. When the legislature and court say that petitions for highways from town to town, or in two or more towns, shall he presented directly to the court in the first instance, they undoubtedly mean and must be understood to speak of towns within our own limits ; and petitions for roads bordering on other States, although a continuation of the same would extend into those States, are within the jurisdiction of the selectmen to entertain; for they ask for roads in one town only ; and there is no occasion for further legislation, as is suggested by counsel, to reach such cases.

Whether any road exists in Vermont, connected with the one described in this petition ; or, if not, whether any will be made, is immaterial in the present position of the case. It does not affect the jurisdiction of the court over the petition. Such fact would be material and proper for the consideration of the commissioners upon the question of the public exigencies, and whether the road should be laid out; but it is not a matter that can be considered by the court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 N.H. 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crosby-v-hanover-nh-1858.