Jamieson v. Board of Comm'rs

56 Ind. 466
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 56 Ind. 466 (Jamieson v. Board of Comm'rs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jamieson v. Board of Comm'rs, 56 Ind. 466 (Ind. 1877).

Opinion

Howk, J.

The appellants, in this cause, presented their petition to the appellee The Board of Commissioners of Cass County, praying therein that said appellee would grant them “ a view and establish a public highway,” described in said petition.

On the presentation of said petition, and proof of notice as required by law, the appellee The Board of Commissioners appointed, viewers, who subsequently reported that they had viewed and located said highway, and that it was a “ highway of public utility.” Afterward, the appellee Samuel S. Metsker and others presented to said board of commissioners a remonstrance [468]*468against said highway, upon the ground that it would he of no public benefit. On the presentation of the remonstrance, the board appointed reviewers, who thereafter reported, that they had located said highway, and that it was a “ highway of public utility.” The appellee 'Samuel S. Metsker then presented to said board of commissioners his individual remonstrance against said highway, and asking for an assessment of the damages he would sustain from the opening of said highway. On the presentation of this remonstrance, the board of commissioners appointed reviewers, to assess the damages, if any, which the appellee Samuel S. Metsker would sustain, by reason of the opening of said highway; which reviewers afterward reported, that the appellee Metsker would sustain no damages whatever by the establishment of said highway. And the board of commissioners approved said report, and established said highway, of the width of thirty feet. From the decision and order of the appellee The Board of Commissioners of Cass County, the appellee Samuel S. Metsker appealed to the court below.

The appellee The Board of Commissioners of Cass' County moved the court below to dismiss the cause of action, so far as the same related to said board, because the said board had no interest in said cause of action, and was improperly made a party to the action; which motion was overruled by the court, and to this decision the appellee The Board of Commissioners excepted and filed its bill of exceptions.

This cause was tried by a jury, in the court below, and a verdict was returned, “ that the proposed highway will be of public utility, and that Samuel S. Metsker will sustain damages to the amount of one hundred and fifty dollars, by reason of locating the same upon his premises.” The appellee Metsker moved the court below, for a new trial, which motion .was overruled, and. said Metsker excepted. And the appellants moved the court [469]*469below to tax all the costs and damages against the appellee The Board of Commissioners of Cass County, which motion was overruled, and the appellants excepted. Judgment was then rendered by the court below, that the proposed highway was of public utility, and that the appellee Samuel S. Metsker would be damaged thereby in the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars; that on the payment of said damages, as provided in said judgment, the said highway, describing it, should then be a highway, and opened and worked as other public highways; that the said damages assessed in favor of the appellee Metsker might be paid by the appellee The Board of Commissioners of Cass County, or by the appellants, at their option, in ninety days from the date of said judgment; and that the appellee the said Board of Commissioners, within that time, should indicate by an order, entered of record, whether it would pay said damages or not. And it was ordered by the court below, that one-half of the costs herein be paid by the appellee Metsker, and the other half be paid by the appellants; to all of which the appellee Metsker and the appellants severally excepted.

And the appellee Samuel S. Metsker moved the court below to set aside so much of the order of the court as required him to pay one-half of the costs herein; which motion was overruled by the court, and to this decision the appellee Metsker excepted.

In this court, the appellants have assigned the following alleged errors of the court below :

1st. In overruling the appellants’ motion to tax the costs in this case against the county ;

2d. In overruling the appellants’ motion to tax the costs in this cause to the county, and in ordering the damages assessed by the jury to be paid out of the county treasury;

3d. In making a conditional order on the finding of the jury, in this, in leaving it to the option of the board [470]*470of commissioners to pay the costs and damages in ninety days, after the jury had found the road petitioned for to be a road of public utility;

4th. In ordering the appellants to pay any part of the costs in said cause, or of the damages assessed; and,

5th. In overruling the appellants’ motion to set aside .the order made in said cause, so far as made, ordering the damages to be paid at the option of the board of commissioners, or the appellants, and that one-half of the costs be taxed against the appellants, and in refusing to order the costs and damages to be paid out of the county treasury.

¥e will briefly consider and decide the several questions presented by these alleged errors, in their enumerated order.

1st. It is claimed by appellants, that the court below erred, in overruling their motion to tax the costs in this case against the county. The appellants failed to make their motion a part of the record, by a proper bill of exceptions; and, therefore, we might well say that the alleged error, of which appellants complain, is not presented by the record. But if it were, we should hold that the court below committed no error, in overruling appellants’ motion. This cause, in the court below, was merely a private controversy between the appellants, on one side, and the appellee Metsker, on the other, and the court, in our opinion, had neither the right nor the power to tax the costs of suit, or any part thereof, against the county.

2d. It would seem from the second alleged error, that the appellants assumed the position, that the court below had the power, and that it was the duty of the court, to order and require the appellee The Board of Commissioners of Cass County to pay the damages and costs in this case. "We can not approve of this position. In our opinion, the court below had no such power; and certainly its duty did not require the court to make any [471]*471such order. The board of commissioners had the power, under the law, to “ order the costs and damages to be paid out of the county treasury; ” and if the board considered the proposed highway “ to be of sufficient importance to the public,” it was the duty of the board to make such order. 1 R. S. 1876, p. 532, sec. 21. But the. law has very wisely, we think, left this matter to the consideration and judgment of the board of commissioners; and the judgment of the board on this point is final, and can not be controlled, coerced or reviewed by any other court.

3d. The appellants claim, that the court below erred in leaving it to the option of the board of commissioners to pay the costs and damages m ninety days, after the jury had found the road petitioned for to be a road of public utility. We can see no error in this order of the court. Where a majority of the viewers, appointed by the board, assess and report damages in favor of a remonstrant, the law leaves it to the option of the board to pay the costs and damages out of the county treasury; and we can-see no reason why the board should not have the same option where the remonstrant’s damages have been assessed by a jury.

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Bluebook (online)
56 Ind. 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jamieson-v-board-of-commrs-ind-1877.