Harris v. Board of Supervisors

55 N.W. 324, 88 Iowa 219
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 18, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 55 N.W. 324 (Harris v. Board of Supervisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Board of Supervisors, 55 N.W. 324, 88 Iowa 219 (iowa 1893).

Opinion

Robinson, C. J.

In April, 1889, a petition was filed in the office of the auditor of Mahaska county, a •copy of which is as follows:

“petition eoe change oe eoad.
“To the Auditor of Mahasha County, Iowa:
“The undersigned, citizens of said county, respectfully petition for a change in the road as follows: Beginning at a point 9.20 chains south and 30 links east of the stone at the southwest corner of the northwest quarter of northwest quarter, section 10, township 75 north, range 16 west; thence north ;8.90 chains; thence east 16.41 chains, intersecting with old road; and that the old road beginning at the point first above mentioned, and running north, 61 degrees and 30 minutes east, 18.67 chains, be vacated and abandoned, or that the said old road be vacated only, and no change made or new road established; and that a commissioner be appointed to view the proposed change of road, pursuant to the statute in such case made and provided.
“Filed in auditor’s office, April 15, 1891.
“A. B. and J. F. Peine.”

The petition was accompanied by a bond, which was approved by the auditor, and filed in his office, and a commissioner was appointed to examine and report upon the changes asked. He examined the premises, and recommended that the changes be made as asked. Notice of the recommendation of the commissioner, and of the time within which objections and claims for damages should be filed, was thereupon duly [221]*221served and published as required by law. On the day before that fixed in the notice for filing objections, a remonstrance, signed by plaintiff and many others, was filed. On the final hearing, after receiving the testimony of witnesses, the defendant board, on the nineteenth day of November, 1889, made the following order :

“Road case, 617. A. B. & J. F. Prine, petitioners, having been taken under advisement by the board, and after a careful examination of all the evidence and all the papers in said case, the board grant the prayer of the petitioners to vacate old highway and establish the new highway, as prayed for; conditioned that the petitioners open up and put new highway in as good condition for travel as the old highway, when needed, and pay all costs within sixty days from date hereof.”

On the thirtieth day of November the remonstrants filed with the auditor a petition for rehearing. The board refused to hear it, on the ground that there was no authority for doing so. On the thirty-first day of July, 1891, in vacation, judgment was entered by the district court annulling the proceedings establishing the highway, on the ground that the board had no jurisdiction to establish it. The next term of court was held in October, and was adjourned on the second day of November. At the December term, the court made an entry in the judgment record, which recited the judgment entered in vacation; that it had not been signed; and that it failed to state the actual adjudication; and, for the purpose of conforming the judgment to the actual determination of the court, ordering and adjudging that the board had no jurisdiction to establish or vacate the road described in the petition, and annulling its proceedings in establishing and vacating it. The defendant appealed in November, 1891, from the judgment as first entered, and in December, 1891, it appealed from it as amended.

[222]*2221‘ Stabiishment petition: jurisdiction. I. The appellee contends that the petition upon which the board of supervisors acted was insufficient to give it jurisdiction to act, for reasons which are, in substance, as follows: That the petition was defective in not asking for the establishment of a highway; that it was deficient in not asking for the vacation of a highway; and, if these objections are not well founded, that the petition was defective in asking for both the establishment and vacation of a highway. It is also insisted that the petition was indefinite and uncertain.

“The board of supervisors has the general supervision over the highways in the county, with power to establish and change them” in the manner provided by law. Code, section 920. “Any person desiring the' establishment, vacation, or alteration of a highway shall file, in the auditor’s office of the proper county, a petition in substance as follows: “To the Board of Supervisors of-county: The undersigned asks that a highway, commencing at-, and running thence-, and terminating at -, be established, vacated, or altered’ (as the case may be).” Id., section 922.

‘ It is not necessary that the form given in the statute be strictly followed. The petition is sufficient if it follows the statutory form in substance, “expressing with reasonable certainty the action desired.” A petition which asks “the appointment of a commissioner to open a road” has been held to be sufficient, as in substantial compliance with the statute. McCollister v. Shuey, 24 Iowa, 363. The doctrine of that case was approved in State v. Pitman, 38 Iowa, 252, and Stevens v. Board of Supervisors, 41 Iowa, 343. See, also, Woolsey v. Board of Supervisors, 32 Iowa, 132.

The case of Curtis v. Pocahontas Co., 72 Iowa, 152, relied upon by appellee, is not in conflict with the conclusion we reach. That case involved the right of the [223]*223plaintiff to recover damages alleged to have been caused by the establishment of a highway. The petition for the highway asked that “the highway * * * be opened for travel, as required by law.” In the circuit court the defendant pleaded that the road in question was located in 1871. The court held that the petition for the highway did not ask that a highway be established; therefore, that the board lacked jurisdiction to establish one. It is evident that the language of the petition under consideration is not the best which could have been chosen to express the wishes of the petitioners. But, construing all parts of the petition together, it appears with reasonable certainty that the petitioners asked that a new highway be established, and that a portion of an old one be vacated, both of which were described; or that the portion of the old one be vacated without the establishment of a new one. There is nothing in the record to suggest that the relief demanded was not understood by any one, and no objection to the petition was made, so far as the record shows, until the petition for rehearing was filed. We are satisfied that the petition was understood by all persons in interest as asking for the vacation of a part of an existing highway and the establishment of a new one to supply the place and purpose of the part vacated, or, if that was not done, that the vacation be ordered without the establishment of a new highway. The fact that alternative relief was asked did not affect the right of the auditor and board of supervisors to act.

2_._:one petition tor. II. It is said that the vacation of one highway and the establishment of another can not be asked in the same petition. We know of no valid objection to such a practice in cases like this, where the highway to be established is to be used in lieu of the one to be vacated. It is not provided for in terms by the statute, nor is it forbidden. It is not only a common practice, however, but may be neces[224]

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.W. 324, 88 Iowa 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-board-of-supervisors-iowa-1893.