Cutler v. Sours

80 Ill. App. 618
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 80 Ill. App. 618 (Cutler v. Sours) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cutler v. Sours, 80 Ill. App. 618 (Ill. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Burroughs

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a common law writ of certiorari in the Circuit Court of Coles County, issued on the petition of the appellees against the appellant and two others, supervisors of Coles county, requiring them to send up the record of a certain proceeding in regard to the laying out of a highway in the town of Lafayette, in that county, and asking the court to quash the order of those supervisors, made on March 28, 1898, in the proceedings regarding the said highway.

The petition for the writ of certiorari alleges that a valid petition for a new highway, describing it, was presented to the commissioners of highways of that town, and the same was denied by the commissioners; an appeal was regularly taken from their decision to the three supervisors, and bv them the decision of the commissioners denying the petition was reversed, and the petition for the highway allowed, after which the supervisors proceeded to ascertain the damages to the three land owners over whose land the proposed highway passed.

The supervisors agreed with one of the land owners to take $120 as his damages for the highway passing over his land, and, being unable to agree with the other two, caused their damages to be assessed by a jury before a justice of the peace, on September 19, 1897, where one was allowed $112.40, and the other $169 damages, which made the total amount of damages for the highway, as thus ascertained, $401.40.

On September 23, 1897, the supervisors made, and filed with the town clerk of the town of Lafayette, their order in regular form, laying out the highway as petitioned for, with a plat and survey of the same attached.

On September 29, 1897, the two land owners whose damages had been assessed before the justice perfected an appeal to the County Court of Coles County, from such assessment; and at the March term, 1898, of that court, on the trial of their cases thus appealed, their damages were assessed, one at $270 and the other $730.

On March 28, 1898, it being within ten days after the County Court had entered the judgments aforesaid, two of the supervisors (the other having been given notice) met in pursuance of notice given to all the parties in interest, and made an order in this petition for a road proceeding in which they recited in full all of the foregoing facts, and all the proceedings concerning the petition for a road, and then stated that they “ being of the opinion that the damages finally assessed by the jury at thé March term of the County Court of Coles County, in the within case, are manifestly too high, and the payment of the same would be an unreasonable burden upon the taxpayers of the town of Lafayette, do hereby revoke all the proceedings had upon within petition, this 28th day of March, A. D. 1898.” Which order was, on the day it was made, filed in the office of the said town clerk, and by him entered in his highway record.

The petition for the writ of certiorari had attached to it, and made a part thereof, a copy of all the proceedings and files in the highway in question, certified to by said town clerk, as being correct, and the petition asked that a writ of certiorari issue, requiring the three supervisors, whom it made defendants, to cause the record of the orders and proceedings on this road petition to be certified to the court, and prayed, upon a hearing, the court would quash the order of the supervisors made upon this petition for a road on March 28, 1898, as the same was void for want of jurisdiction in the supervisors to make it, after they had made the valid order of September 23, 1897, declaring it a highway.

The supervisors, having been served with the writ, made return thereto, in which they stated that the certified copy of the orders, proceedings, and files made in the petition for the road in question, as contained in the petition for the writ, was true and correct.

The supervisors then moved the court to quash the writ of certiorari, which was denied, and on motion of the petitioners the court quashed the order of the supervisors made March 28, 1898, as prayed in the petition for the writ.

The appellant, having perfected an appeal to this court from this judgment, brings the case here and urges us to reverse the same, on the ground that the court improperly denied the motion of the supervisors to quash the writ, and improperly quashed the order of the supervisors made March 28, 1898.

The principal contention of the appellees in this court is that under the provisions of our road and bridge act, when the supervisors, on September 23, 1897, after they had ascertained the aggregate amount of damages to be $401.40, that the owners of the land over which the road was to pass were entitled to, by agreement with one, and assessment of damages by jury, before a justice, as to the other two, made their order in proper form, laying out the road as a highway, and on the same day filed it, together with a survey and plat of the road, with the town clerk of the town of Lafayette, they were without power or jurisdiction afterward to make the order they did on March 28, 1898, revoking their former proceedings on this petition for the road.

The appellant contends that inasmuch as the two land owners properly appealed to the County Court from the assessment of their damages before the justice, and such appeals were not determined until within ten days before March 28, 1898, then, and not until then, was it finally ascertained that the total damages for the road was $1,220; and as the supervisors were then of the opinion that such damages as were thus finally ascertained were manifestly excessive, and the payment of that amount would be an unreasonable burden upon the taxpayers of the town of Lafayette, under Sections 39, 47 and 48, of Chapter 121, S. and C. Ill. Statutes, 1896, they then had the power and jurisdiction to make the order .of revocation that they did.

We are of the opinion that the three supervisors to whom the appeal from the decision of the commissioners of highways denying this road petition was taken, had all the authority given by our road and bridge act to the commissioners in regard to this road petition. (See Sec. 60, S. and C. Ill. Statutes, 1896. p. 3578. And under Sec. 39, Ibid., p. 3568, they were required, before they ordered the road to be established, to ascertain, as'in that act thereinafter provided, the aggregate amount of damages the owners of the land over which the road passed would be entitled to; provided that, in case an appeal was taken from the assessment of damages before the justice of the peace, they might, in their discretion, make an order laying out the road, either before or after such appeal was determined, in the manner in the said act thereinafter provided; that is,'first, the supervisors had to ascertain the total amount of damages to be paid to the land owners (mentioned in the section) before they could order the road to be established; second, these damages they must ascertain in the manner provided in that act; and third, they might, in their discretion, in the manner provided in that act, make an order laying out such road before or after the determination of an appeal, in case an appeal is taken from the assessment of such damages, before the justice of the peace.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Ill. App. 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cutler-v-sours-illappct-1898.