Ives v. Town of East Haven

48 Conn. 272
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 48 Conn. 272 (Ives v. Town of East Haven) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ives v. Town of East Haven, 48 Conn. 272 (Colo. 1880).

Opinion

Park, C. J.

One of the numerous questions made in this case is in regard to the mode by which the proceedings came into court. The statute of 1866 in regard to the laying out of highways by the Superior Court provides that the citation “ shall be served upon one or more of the selectmen of the town within which such highway is, to appear if they see cause,” &c. No such service was made in this case, but two of the five selectmen of the town of East Haven waived the Service of the citation, in a writing to that effect upon the petition, at a time when but eleven days could intervene before the sitting of the court to which the petition was made [286]*286returnable, while the statute requires that a citation be served twelve days before the session. It further appears that during the term of the court to which the petition was made returnable, Charles A. Bray, who had been duly appointed special town agent “ to attend to all suits brought against the town,” agreed in writing with the petitioner that the court at that term might appoint a committee in the case, and that a committee was accordingly appointed, who subsequently heard the case, and made their report, which report is the subject of the present controversy.

In these circumstances the question is, was the town so in court that it is bound by the proceedings ?

We do not deem it necessary to determine whether the action of the selectmen in waiving service of the petition bound the town. We can however see no good reason why highway proceedings against towns should be an exception to the general rule that parties entitled to have papers served upon them, either by reading or by a certified copy, may dispense with that formality if they choose. Time and expense are saved by so doing, without any detriment whatever resulting to the parties. But however this may be in a proceeding-like the present, we think it clear that the town appeared in the case, through its authorized special agent, when he made the agreement with the petitioner for the appointment of a committee in the case. And, after a long and expensive trial had been had before the committee, in which the town participated, and a report adverse to the parties remonstrating had been made, we think it was too late to go back of the action of the town in the premises, and complain of the mode by which the proceeding came into court. This could not be done in other cases, and we see no reason why it should be done here. Finch v. Ives, 22 Conn., 101; Bailey v. Town of Trumbull, 31 Conn., 581; Fowler v. Bishop, 32 Conn., 199; Post v. Williams, 33 Conn., 147; Woodruff v. Bacon, 34 Conn., 181.

Towns are required by statute to construct and maintain necessary highways within their limits unless otherwise [287]*287provided, and although they are constructed for the general public, still this fact makes no difference in the mode of procedure when the Superior Court orders their construction. Towns are regarded as parties in highway cases as much as in others, and are as much bound by their admissions and waivers.

Chief Justice Butler,.in the case of Beardsley v. The Town of Washington, 39 Conn., 265, treats a case of this character as governed by the same rules and principles that are applicable to other cases, and held the town bound by a waiver arising from their conduct in that case, as we hold them bound here.

The objection we have considered cannot be taken advantage of by the land-owners along the line of the road. If the town was in court by a voluntary submission to its jurisdiction, it was in court for all purposes whatsoever, and as much so as it would have been if the citation had been regularly served. The land-owners were not parties to the case in the first instance, and could not be made parties till the proceeding was pending in court; and when it was so pending by the waiver of the town, it was too late for them-to make objection to a transaction that occurred before they were interested in the suit. It would be strange if such owners should be permitted to complain of want of service on the town, when the town itself, the only party respondent at the time, waived all objection to the want of service by its appearance and defence in the case. Besides, the case last cited held that such owners were themselves bound by a similar waiver growing out of their own conduct. The reasoning of that case applies with equal force to this.

It has been urged as another objection that the court did not issue an order of notice to be served on the parties particularly interested in the proceeding, and did not fix a time and place for the hearing before the committee, until a term subsequent to the one at which the committee was appointed. It is not pretended that the parties had not sufficient notice by the order to prepare their cases for trial, but the objection is placed upon the technical ground that such order of notice [288]*288and such fixing of the time and place for the trial must he made at the same term of the court at which the committee was appointed. We see no reason in this objection. The court that made the appointment was the same court that made the order. Different terms cannot make it a different court, nor affect its right to act in the matter. Some terms are much longer than others. Suppbse the term of the court had continued from May till October; would the case have been any different ? We think not.

A further objection is made, that the committee improperly heard evidence on the question whether the selectmen of the town had neglected and refused to lay out the road before the petition was brought. The court subsequently found this fact in the case, which rendered the finding of the committee in this respect wholly immaterial. It could not have occasioned any detriment to the cause of the remonstrants. The case of Southington v. Clark, 13 Conn., 370, fully justifies the action of the court in this respect.

We think the bond of the petitioner was properly received in evidence by the committee. It described the way as correctly as it could have been done at the time it was executed, 'and though it does not state the sum for which the work will be done, yet as it binds the petitioner to make the road wholly at his own cost, a statement of the sum was not necessary. It conforms sufficiently to the statute, and obviously was binding on the parties to it.

It further appeal’s in the case that the committee made an alternative assessment of land damages and benefits to adjoining proprietors, and that for this cause the court re-committed the report in order that they might make their assessment definite and certain. No additional order of notice was made for the parties to appear before the committee and again be heard upon the question of damages and benefits, and no farther testimony was heard on the subject, but the committee made a supplemental report in which the damages and benefits were definitely determined from the evidence they had previously heard. This action of the court is made the basis of several grounds of complaint.

[289]*289It is said, in tlic first place, that the court had no power to re-commit the report, because the statute confers no authority for the purpose; that if there was anything erroneous in the report the court should have rejected it entirely, and appointed another committee to hear the case de novo. But we think the case of Waterbury v. Darien,

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Bluebook (online)
48 Conn. 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ives-v-town-of-east-haven-conn-1880.