Ferguson v. Seward

111 So. 596, 146 Miss. 613, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 208
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1927
DocketNo. 26288.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 111 So. 596 (Ferguson v. Seward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferguson v. Seward, 111 So. 596, 146 Miss. 613, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 208 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from the circuit court of "Wilkinson county, and it involves the validity of the proceedings of the board of supervisors in laying out and changing the route of a public road leading south from Woodville, Miss., to the Louisiana state line.

At the April, 1926, meeting of the board of supervisors of Wilkinson county, a petition purporting to be signed by Mrs. S. J. Seward and fourteen others was filed, asking that the said board lay out, alter, open, and change the road in question by commencing- on the west bank of the Woodville road, at the corporate limits of the town of Woodville, as staked out by the state highway engineers, and running southerly through and over certain lands therein described, and through and across the lands of the appellant, J. B. Ferguson, and terminating by connecting with the gravel highway at the Louisiana and Mississippi state line, as surveyed, run off, and staked by the engineers of the state highway department, and approved by the federal engineer. This petition recited that the public interest and convenience required that the said road be so laid out, opened, altered, and changed; that the petitioners were freeholders and householders of the said road district and of Wilkinson *623 county; and that the owners of the land, through which the road would run, had been given five days’ notice, as required by law.

Upon the filing of this petition, it was entered" upon the minutes of the board of supervisors, and the board adopted the following order:

“Ordered that the above petition be and the same is hereby granted, and, further, ordered that J. E. Carter and T. 0. Brown, members from the fourth and fifth supervisors’ district, respectively, be and are appointed a committee to examine and view the contemplated route of the said road, and should they find the same practicable shall report their proceedings in writing at the May meeting of said board.”

At the regular May meeting of the board, the committee appointed to examine and view the proposed route of the road reported that they had performed their duties, as required by law; that they had found the proposed road to be practicable; that they had laid out and marked it; and thereupon the board entered an order adopting and confirming this report, and ordering the proper road workers to open and work said road as changed. At the same meeting, an order was entered approving the plans, specifications, and estimates of cost of the project as then on file, and requesting the state highway department to advertise for bids for the construction of the road. An order was also entered designating May 17, 1926, as the date on which the board would go on the premises of the various owners of the land over which the road ran, for the purpose of assessing their damages, and directing that notice of the intention of the board so to do be served on the various owners of the land. At the same meeting, and at the time prescribed by section 1402, Code of 1906 (section 70'82, Hemingway’s Code), appellant filed with the board of supervisors the following claim for damages for the taking of his property:

“Honorable Board of Supervisors of Wilkinson County:
*624 “Without waiving any legal right, and reserving to myself the right allowed by law to take any action proper and necessary for my relief, and expressly disclaiming the intent to accept any sum as-compensation for my lands proposed to be taken for a public road, or for damages sustained and to be sustained by me in the construction of the proposed road, and being the road proposed to be constructed south from Woodville through my property and to the Louisiana state line, and reserving the right to accept such damages as may be allowed me on the final conclusion of any litigation or condemnation or any other action in which my property and claim is involved, I file this claim for damages: For compensation for the land taken for the said public road, and for damages sustained by me by the construction of the said road, .and for damages to the property as a whole, and the cost of fencing, drainage, and all other consequent damages to my said land and property, the sum of six thousand dollars.”

On the 15th day of May, the appellant filed a petition setting forth the various proceedings of the board of supervisors in reference to the laying out and changing of the road, and praying for a writ of certiorari to review the proceedings, and the same was granted by the circuit judge. To this petition the various landowners, as well as the board of supervisors, were made parties defendant, and the bond given for the issuance of-the writ was made payable to these landowners and to the state of Mississippi. The writ was issued and served on the members of the board of supervisors on or before May 17, 1926, but on that date, ignoring this writ, the board proceeded to assess the damages of the several landowners and made a report thereof to the regular June meeting of the board. On the 3d day of June, a writ of prohibition, which was ordered to issue by a judge of this court, was served on the board of supervisors, requiring them to cease and desist from assessing the damages sustained by the appellant, and from awarding *625 a contract for the construction of the highway across the lands of appellant, and from taking any further proceedings in said matters, as against the appellant, until and unless otherwise ordered by the court.

At the June meeting of the board, the report of damages assessed by the members thereof on May 17th was approved as to all the landowners except this appellant. At that meeting, there was also entered an order attempting to ratify and validate the action of the board as taken at the April meeting, by reciting at length that, at the April meeting, the board had adjudicated the existence-of the necessary jurisdictional facts, although such facts do not appear in any of the orders adopted at the April meeting of the board. At the same meeting, there were other orders entered letting a contract for the construction of the road, except that portion across the lands of the appellant, but these orders, as well as certain proceedings, taken to increase the certiorari bond, are not here material.

When the writ of certiorari came up for hearing- in the circuit court, the several landowners, who were made parties defendant to the petition, filed a disclaimer of all right or interest in the proceedings and moved the court to dismiss the proceedings as to them, and this motion was sustained. The appellant filed a motion to strike from the transcript of the record all orders or proceedings of the board, which had been taken and entered subsequent to the date of the service of the writ of certiorari, and this motion was overruled.

Wilkinson county filed a motion to dismiss the writ of certiorari, on the grounds, first, that the circuit court was without jurisdiction of the cause; second, that the alleged writ of certiorari was null and void and not authorized by law; third, the certiorari or appeal was premature; fourth, the certiorari

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Related

Board of Supervisors v. McCormick
42 So. 2d 177 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1949)
Ferguson v. Board of Sup'rs
115 So. 779 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 So. 596, 146 Miss. 613, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-seward-miss-1927.