Hoek v. Township of Allendale

126 N.W. 987, 161 Mich. 571, 1910 Mich. LEXIS 911
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1910
DocketDocket No. 87
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 126 N.W. 987 (Hoek v. Township of Allendale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoek v. Township of Allendale, 126 N.W. 987, 161 Mich. 571, 1910 Mich. LEXIS 911 (Mich. 1910).

Opinion

Hooker, J.

Hoek worked his highway tax under direction of an overseer. He plowed up certain growing grain near the center of the road. He claims to have been sued by Schmidt, the man who sowed the grain, and to have suffered judgment in both justice and circuit courts, and to have paid the latter. He thereupon sued the highway commissioner, one Molyneaux, and the town[573]*573ship, claiming the right to recover from one, or both, the amount paid upon the judgment, and for disbursements, and compensation for his time in preparing for and attending the suit. In support of his action, he proved that the highway in question separated his land from that of Schmidt, but that Schmidt sowed rye to the center of the road, thus obstructing plaintiff in getting to his barn, to do which it was necessary to use this road. We need not discuss the merits of the original controversy between plaintiff and Schmidt, or the action brought by the latter. Evidently the court found that plaintiff was a tort-feasor in plowing up the crop, and no attempt was made in this case to reopen that matter. If the commissioner directed the work to be done at this place he may have been a wrongdoer also, and Schmidt may have had the option of bringing a joint or several action. He chose the latter, and the sole question here is plaintiff’s right to reimbursement from Molyneaux or the township, or both. This highway was a cul-de-sac extending north from an east and west highway laid along the south side of the lands of plaintiff and Schmidt, and extending to Grand river. Apparently it was used but little, and Schmidt bad desired to have it taken up. This plaintiff opposed, though he admits having put a fence across it at a point north of his barn.

The testimony of plaintiff and his wife indicates unfriendliness between plaintiff and Schmidt. It tended to prove that at some time Schmidt moved his barn upon this highway and put it in bad shape, and afterwards plowed up a portion of the road and sowed grain; that the plaintiff saw Molyneaux, then highway commissioner, and asked the privilege of working out his road tax, by putting the labor on this highway, to which Molyneaux assented, and so informed the overseer of the district. When the latter spoke to the plaintiff about his work, plaintiff told him that Molyneaux had consented to his work being done upon this highway, and offered to do it, but the overseer was unwilling to set him at work there until Moly[574]*574neaux should locate the center line of the road. Some correspondence followed, Molyneaux writing plaintiff as follows:

“ September 28, Grand Haven Road Del. No. 1.
“ Mr. Hoek.
Dear Sir: I was at your place today. I did not find any one home. I should have been there before, but I did not get your letter on account of being directed to the post office instead of R. F. D. I think if you know about where the center of the road is it will be all right to plow it up. I think the sooner it is plowed and graded up, the better.
“ Yours truly,
“A. L. Molyneaux, H. C.”

At a subsequent interview with Molyneaux the following occurred, according to plaintiff’s testimony:

“After I received this letter, Mr. Pott came to see me again. He said, * I see that Mr. Molyneaux has not straightened out the road yet.’ He said that he couldn’t go on with it; he couldn’t let me do my work because it was not straightened. By that he meant that he wanted to know where the center of it was. After that I went to see Mr. Molyneaux again. He told me he would come down and straighten it out, and he did come down about three weeks after I received this letter from him. It was after grape picking time. I don’t remember the date. I am sure it was three weeks after this. When he came down we got a couple of stakes, he held the stakes and I drove them down, and straightened it out. We commenced at the north end of the house. One stake was opposite my house. We did not go to the south, where the east and west road is. We can see it plainly from our house because it is on a knoll, and we can look from the house towards the river and also the other way. We drove one stake north of the house, and west, and the other stake opposite the house. We found the old bed of the road, the middle of the road. There were not any fences there to go by. The fences were towards the river. We could find the middle of the road. There were not any stakes towards the south and where the east and west road run. There was a big soft maple tree that had always been there in the center as long as I lived there. We took that for the center. Mr. Molyneaux helped me drive [575]*575these stakes. He told me to plow it up now, and that no matter what Schmidt said he would stand by me. I do not know whether he had any talk with Schmidt or not. My wife was there at the time. She said, ‘I suppose when Schmidt sees these stakes there will be more trouble.’ Mr. Molyneaux said: ‘Nevermind Schmidt; I told Mr. Hoek to plow it up; he better plow it up and I would stand back of him.’ I did plow some of it up that fall and finished it in the year 1907 — March 28th or 29th— just as soon as the frost went out. I do not know whether Molyneaux came to see the job after it was done or not. I asked him for an order, and he gave me one for $4 for my work on that road — the order drawn on the township treasurer. When I did this work under the instructions of Mr. Molyneaux I certainly thought that I had a right to do it. I was sure that I was working in the center of the highway. Mr. Molyneaux acted as though he thought that we were in the middle of the highway. Mr. Molyneaux did not know that I was getting over into Schmidt’s rye. I did not think that I was on Schmidt’s land. I was pretty sure that I was not on his land, and I acted in good faith.”

Upon the foregoing statement of facts the plaintiff claims that both Molyneaux and the township are liable. There is some testimony of conversations between the plaintiff and some of the township officers, but we think it unnecessary to refer to it further as it in no way tends to establish a liability on the part of the township. The case is therefore reduced to a few legal questions.

1. Liability of the Township. Nothing is better settled in this State than the principle that a quasi municipal corporation is not liable for the action of officers (though elected by the township) who perform a purely State function imposed upon them by law, whether the action is for negligence or trespass, although an action may in many eases lie against the officer personally. Such was the law of England and is of this country as the following authorities show:

In Commissioners of Highways of Niles Township, v. Martin, 4 Mich. 557 (69 Am. Dec. 333), after adverting to the English rule, this court said, in an opinion [576]*576written by the late Judge Douglass, a lawyer of great learning:

“Towns, with us, are mere political organizations, created wholly by statute for certain purposes of local government. They are vested with no franchises or special privileges for their own benefit. They have only such powers as the statute confers, and are subject to no obligations, except such as are derived from statutory provisions. It is difficult to see how any common-law obligations, the sole foundation of which is prescription and immemorial usage, can be made to attach to them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 N.W. 987, 161 Mich. 571, 1910 Mich. LEXIS 911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoek-v-township-of-allendale-mich-1910.