Jones v. Mason
This text of 97 A. 746 (Jones v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The report of the commissioners having been returned into the court might be recommitted or rejected by the court (P. S., c. 68, s. 8), but it has always been held that “the court *149 has no power to revise the doings of the commissioners for the purpose of ascertaining whether they have judged wisely and correctly . . . nor for any purpose but to see that their proceedings have been regular, and that fraud or surprise has not been used to vitiate their results.” Hampstead’s Petition, 19 N. H. 343, 347; Crosby v. Hanover, 36 N. H. 414, 418; Doughty v. Little, 61 N. H. 365, 368. There is no suggestion of any irregularity, fraud or surprise. What the public good requires, whether there was public necessity for the highway is a question of fact. Petition of the Milford & Manchester R. R., 68 N. H. 570. “The statute makes the commissioners the tribunal to judge of the necessity of the highway. In this respect the court has no power to revise the judgment of the commissioners.” Thompson v. Conway, 53 N. H. 622, 626. That there are no houses on the proposed highway, or only one, and the existence of a private way over the proposed route are evidentiary facts, which might be regarded as tending to establish that the highway was unnecessary. But as the weight of the evidence is exclusively for the commissioners (Webster’s Petition, 60 N. H. 576, 578) these facts do not establish as matter of law the absence of necessity for the public way.
Exception overruled.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
97 A. 746, 78 N.H. 148, 1916 N.H. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-mason-nh-1916.