Inhabitants of Hyde Park v. Wiggin

31 N.E. 693, 157 Mass. 94, 1892 Mass. LEXIS 28
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 27, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 31 N.E. 693 (Inhabitants of Hyde Park v. Wiggin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inhabitants of Hyde Park v. Wiggin, 31 N.E. 693, 157 Mass. 94, 1892 Mass. LEXIS 28 (Mass. 1892).

Opinion

Barker, J.

We are asked to prohibit the county commissioners of Norfolk County from proceeding further upon a petition representing that public convenience and necessity require Metropolitan Avenue in Hyde Park to be laid out as a highway. The commissioners, one of whom, Morrell, was a resident of Hyde Park, were sitting on May 20, 1890, in an adjourned regular meeting, when this petition was presented. Thereupon Morrell retired from the room and from the deliberations of the board, and he has not either then or afterward acted on the petition. Upon his withdrawal, no one then appearing in oppo[95]*95sition, the other two commissioners made an order of notice, appointing the ninth day of the next July, and the office of the selectmen in Hyde Park, as the time and place for meeting and proceeding to view the route, and hearing and acting upon the petition, and this order was duly served upon the town. In pursuance of the order, the board, consisting of the two other commissioners and a qualified special commissioner, met and viewed the route, and by adjournments had hearings upon different days upon the merits of the petition, and on July 31, 1890, adjudged that common convenience and necessity required the way to be laid out, and appointed October 7, 1890, as the time when they would further view the premises and lay out the way.

The selectmen of Hyde Park, and other citizens' and taxpayers of the town, appeared before the commissioners and opposed the laying out of the way at the hearings on the merits of the petition. The selectmen had no authority to appear for the town unless under a by-law which is as follows :

“ Actions at Law. The selectmen shall have full authority, as agents of the town, to employ counsel, to institute and prosecute suits in the name of ’the town, and to appear for and defend suits brought against it, unless otherwise specially ordered by vote of the town.”

On September 17, 1890, the town voted to refer the matter to the selectmen, “ with full power to represent and protect the town’s interest in any manner which they may deem legal, honorable, and proper.”

At the meeting of October 7, 1890, the two commissioners and the special commissioner sitting, the selectmen in behalf of the town presented in writing its objections to any further action by the board. The commissioners declined to hear evidence in support of the objections, and thereupon the town withdrew from the hearing, and brought this petition for a writ of prohibition. The objections, so far as now insisted upon, were, in substance, that the board which received the petition was not properly constituted; that Morrell acted as one of the commissioners in issuing the order of notice; that no legal notice of the hearing was ordered or served; and that the adjudication was not legally made by a properly constituted board. [96]*96At the meeting of July 9, and the hearings on the merits prior to July 31, the petitioners for the way appeared, and also the town of Hyde Park, represented by an attorney and counsellor at law and by the selectmen; but there was no vote of the town in relation to the matter until that of September 17. At these hearings the selectmen claimed that the commissioners had no jurisdiction, because the avenue was a public way; but the ■commissioners found that it was a private way, and the town no longer controverts this point. No other objection was made, before the adjudication of July 31, to the jurisdiction of the commissioners, or to the validity of their proceedings; but neither the selectmen nor the counsel who appeared for the town knew of the facts pertaining to the issue of the notice until after that date.

In the agreed statement of facts, a preliminary question is reserved by the parties, whether, in view of the commissioners’ record, evidence aliunde is admissible of the fact that Morrell retired from the meeting of May 20,1890, upon the presentation of the petition, and took no further part in the proceedings.

But even if we assume that the order of notice was made by the full board of standing commissioners, or that it was not within the power of the two commissioners, after Morrell’s withdrawal from the meeting, to make that order, we are of opinion that any objection on either ground is no longer open, in consequence of the appearance and participation of the selectmen, in behalf of the town, in the hearings upon the merits of the petition resulting in the adjudication of July 31.

In the first place, it is to be observed that the jurisdiction of the board is acquired, not by the issue or service of the order of notice, but by the presentation of the petition, which asks the board to act in a matter over which jurisdiction is given to it by the statutes. Jurisdiction attached upon the presentation of the petition, and was not lost, and could not be devested by the adoption of unauthorized or the omission of required steps on the part of the board. The office of the order was to enable the petitioners for the way, and all other persons interested In the possible action of the board, to know when and where they might attend upon it, to make known and protect their rights in the matter. As the meeting was appointed to be held at [97]*97the office of the selectmen, and after a reasonable interval, it is evident that the order gave the town the same opportunity to appear and to protect its rights as one made by a full board of competent commissioners. In either case, the irregularity is therefore one which, upon sound principles, may be waived by the parties interested, or cured by a general appearance and participation in the subsequent proceedings, without objection to the invalidity of the notice. Commonwealth v. Westborough, 3 Mass. 406. Ripley v. Warren, 2 Pick. 592. New Salem, petitioner, 6 Pick. 470, 473. Freetown v. County Commissioners, 9 Pick. 46, 50. Ipswich v. County Commissioners, 10 Pick. 519. Copeland v. Packard, 16 Pick. 217, 220. Rutland v. County Commissioners, 20 Pick. 71, 80. Hancock v. Boston, 1 Met. 122, 125. Whately v. County Commissioners, 1 Met. 336, 344. Simonds v. Parker, 1 Met. 508. Carpenter v. Aldrich, 3 Met. 58. New Marlborough v. County Commissioners, 9 Met. 423, 433. Clark v. Montague, 1 Gray, 446. Loomis v. Wadhams, 8 Gray, 557, 561. Tolland v. County Commissoners, 13 Gray, 12. Hastings v. Bolton, 1 Allen, 529, 531. Lawrence v. Bassett, 5 Allen, 140, 142. Lathrop v. Bowen, 121 Mass. 107. Hazard v. Wason, 152 Mass. 268, 270. The principle of these cases is not altogether that of waiver, but may be thus stated: that, when a court has jurisdiction of the cause, it may acquire jurisdiction of the necessary parties by their voluntary appearance and submission. In this case the records and minutes of the board which had issued the notice were public, and open to the inspection of the town’s officials and counsel; and a general appearance of the town and participation in the hearing upon its merits, without objection upon the point, would cure any defect of notice, and give the board jurisdiction over the town as a party, although its officers and counsel were ignorant of the defect.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.E. 693, 157 Mass. 94, 1892 Mass. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inhabitants-of-hyde-park-v-wiggin-mass-1892.