Janvrin v. Poole

63 N.E. 1066, 181 Mass. 463, 1902 Mass. LEXIS 894
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 22, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 63 N.E. 1066 (Janvrin v. Poole) 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
Janvrin v. Poole, 63 N.E. 1066, 181 Mass. 463, 1902 Mass. LEXIS 894 (Mass. 1902).

Opinion

Morton, J.

This is a petition for a writ of certiorari to quash a betterment assessed by the selectmen of the town of Revere on land of the petitioner for the laying out and construction of Waverly Avenue so called in that town. The case comes here on a report by the justice who heard it. The report concludes as follows: “ If on the foregoing facts, findings, and evidence a writ of certiorari should be issued, an order is to be made accordingly; otherwise, the petition is to be dismissed, or such other order is to be made as law and justice require.” The [464]*464pleadings are made a part of the report. The petition is directed against the former board of survey, the selectmen, and the inhabitants of the town. There is an answer or return by the selectmen, the inhabitants of the town, and a majority of the former board of survey. The former board of survey was abolished subsequent to the laying out of the avenue, and it is contended, amongst other things, by the respondents that a petition for certiorari cannot be maintained against the members of that board, or against the inhabitants of the town. The petitioner contends that the board of survey had jurisdiction only in regard to highways, and that, as this is a town way, the laying out was invalid and the assessment therefore void. If we assume that there is no force in the objection that a petition for certiorari will not lie against the former board of survey, or the inhabitants of the town, which we are far from intimating, (Robbins v. Lexington, 8 Cush. 292,) and that the question of the validity of the lay-out is properly raised by the petition, we think that, nevertheless, the petitioner can take nothing by her contention. It seems to us that the word “ highway ” as used in the act establishing the board of survey (St. 1896, c. 417) was used as including all ways which the public interest might require to be laid out, located anew, altered or widened in the town by the town authorities. Any other construction would have greatly impaired the efficiency of the act, and we can see no good reason for giving the word the limited meaning for which the petitioner contends.

The petitioner contends further that the selectmen did not comply with the provisions of Pub. Sts. c. 51, § 1, and did not determine the value of the benefit and advantage to her remaining land, nor the expense of laying out or grading the way, but voted to assess the betterment without regard to the cost of laying out and without regard to the benefit and advantage to her remaining land; that the assessment was not made within two years from the passage of the order laying out the way; and that the way was not completed before the assessment was laid. She also contends that it was competent for her to show that it was agreed between her and the selectmen that no betterments should be assessed upon her remaining land, and that evidence which she offered for that purpose and for the purpose of show[465]*465ing that the selectmen had not acted in good faith in making the assessment, but had voted the same because-it was necessary that it should be done within two years after the laying out of the way, and to offset her claim for damages, and which was rejected by the presiding justice, should have been admitted.

The whole record of the selectmen in regard to the assessment of the betterment is, so far as appears, as follows: “ Dec. 17, 1900. Voted that in our opinion the estates of Mrs. Martha L. Janvrin be assessed betterment on the Waverly Avenue Extension to the amount of two thousand six hundred and twenty-five (2,625) dollars, and Mrs. E. L. Lancaster three hundred and eighty (380) dollars, a total of three thousand and five (3,005) dollars.” But in their answer they say that at the time of the passage of this vote they did determine the value of the benefit, and the advantage to the petitioner’s said remaining land abutting upon said way, and the expense of laying out and grading the way, and proceed to set out other things done and considered by them at that time which, if true, show a full compliance with the requirements of Pub. Sts. c. 51, § 1, provided they were done within two years of the laying out. No doubt it would have been more regular if these matters had been incorporated into the record, but the statement of the selectmen in regard to them in their answer or return is conclusive. Ward v. Aldermen of Newton, ante, 432. Haven v. County Commissioners, 155 Mass. 467. Tewksbury v. County Commissioners, 117 Mass. 563. Farmington River Water Power Co. v. County Commissioners, 112 Mass. 206.

The assessment was made December 17,1900. The order of the board of survey under which the avenue was laid out was passed October 18, 1898, and it is stated in the return of the respondents that a report of the laying out was duly filed by the board of survey in the office of the town clerk on October 28, 1898. On December 19, 1898, under a proper article in the warrant, the town voted that the avenue, as laid out by the board of survey, be allowed and accepted as a public town way. The petitioner contends that the laying out took place on October 18 when the board of survey passed its order, and relies for this on Hitchcock v. Aldermen of Springfield, 121 Mass. 382. But that case arose under the city charter of Springfield, which [466]*466gives to the city council “ exclusive authority and power to lay out, alter, or discontinue any street or way, the termini of which are entirely within the city.” St. 1852, c. 94, § 14. The vote of the city council necessarily therefore constituted the laying out from which the two years for the assessment of the betterment began to run. The statute in the present case provided that the board should “ proceed in the manner provided at the date of the passage of this act for laying out highways in said town.” St. 1896, c. 417, § 6. We have already construed the word “ highway ” to include a town way such as this was, and in laying out town ways the final action is by the town. Pub. Sts. c. 49, § 71. It follows that the avenue in question was not laid out till the town had acted on the same December 19, 1898, and that the assessment was within two years from the laying out of the avenue.

The respondents alleged in their answer that the work of laying out and grading the way had been completed at the time of the assessment. The petitioner was permitted to introduce evidence controverting this, and the respondents to introduce evidence supporting it. The question of the competency of the evidence was reserved for the full court. The presiding justice found, if the evidence was competent, that “ the street was not, on December 17, 1900, and has not been at any time, a well constructed and finished macadamized street. It was passable and safe, but its surface was rough and hard to drive over for want of a sufficient coating of screenings or gravel properly wet and rolled. The proposal for construction set out in the order of the board of survey contemplated a completed condition much better, as to the surface of the street, than that which has existed. It is a reasonable inference from the evidence, and I accordingly find, that the contractor submitted the work to the selectmen as a substantial performance of his contract, and that they accepted it as such, although it did not fully meet the requirements of the writing by which the parties were bound.” The presiding justice does not seem to us to have found that the street was • completed.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Waterman v. City Council of Gloucester
154 N.E.2d 898 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1959)
Merrill v. Selectmen of Saugus
134 N.E.2d 128 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1956)
Byfield v. City of Newton
141 N.E. 658 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1923)
Taintor v. Mayor & Aldermen of Cambridge
83 N.E. 1101 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1908)
Gardiner v. Street Commissioners
74 N.E. 341 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 N.E. 1066, 181 Mass. 463, 1902 Mass. LEXIS 894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janvrin-v-poole-mass-1902.