Linblom v. Ramsey

75 Ill. 246
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 75 Ill. 246 (Linblom v. Ramsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Linblom v. Ramsey, 75 Ill. 246 (Ill. 1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McAllister

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Appellant sued appellee in trespass for unlawfully tearing down a portion of fence enclosing land of which the former was in possession as tenant of Mrs. Dewey, and letting in cattle, whereby his crops were injured. The possession of plaintiff, and the trespass by defendant, were conclusively proved, but the jury found the defendant not guilty, and the court gave judgment upon the verdict. Plaintiff appealed to this court.

The defendant sought to justify the trespass, on the ground that he was supervisor of a road district in Henderson county, and that the locus in quo was a part of his district and a portion of an established highway. Ho question is made as to his being such supervisor, and to prove the establishment of a public highway through the lands in question, defendant gave in evidence an order of the county court of that county made in 1861, purporting to make an alteration in a certain county road leading from Shaw’s bridge on Honey Creek, to the town of Warren, and described thus: “ Commencing at the southeast corner of the north-east quarter of section 20, township 9 north, range 5 west, thence running 80 rods west, thence north 160 rods, thence on the most practicable route to the town of Warren.” The order of the county court, after referring to the report of the viewers, adopts the plat and field notes of the surveyor accompanying it, “ except the east line of. William Ingerson’s land, W. i, S. E. 17, on which there is a hedge standing, which shall not be interfered with without damages are paid.”

It appeared that the lands in plaintiff’s possession were in the same section and adjoined those of Ingerson referred to in the order; that the hedge referred to was 160 rods long; that nothing had ever been done under the order until in the spring of 1871; that Ingerson claimed, but never had been paid any damages; and, although the court admitted evidence on behalf of defendant, not of competent surveyors or of a satisfactory character, tending to show that Ingerson’s hedge was outside the line of the proposed road as surveyed and designated by the viewers, yet when the plaintiff offered to prove by a competent surveyor, who had carefully surveyed the lines of the proposed road, that the hedge would fall within such lines, the court excluded the evidence and instructed the jury on behalf of defendant that in this case it made no difference whether the Ingerson hedge in question was within the line of the road in controversy or not.

The county of Henderson was not under township organization. The fifty-seventh section (Gross’ Stat. 1869, p. 673) made it the duty of the viewers to ascertain when damages would be claimed, and report the names of the claimants to the court at the time of making the report.

The road viewers in this case reported the names of several, among whom was Ingerson. The merit of his claim was recognized, and the order was qualified as above stated. Under this phase of the case the order was not operative, or, in other words, was not a justification to the supervisor of roads to proceed and open the road until a compromise of the damages, or an assessment of them, had been made and reported to the county court, as provided in section 68 of the statute. Gross’ Stat. 1869, pp. 675-6. That section, after providing for the mode of assessment, says: “ Which award or assessment of damages, shall, as well where the amount shall be agreed upon by the parties, without applying to a justice of the peace, be laid before the county commissioners’ court for consideration, who shall examine the matter, and should they decide the amount of damages is not unreasonable, or more than should be given, and that the opening and improving the road is called for by the public interest, <md thejmcmces of the eov/rvby will justify, they, in that case, will approve and accept the award, and order the money to be paid; and the same being paid, the commissioner, superintendent or supervisor shall proceed to open and construct said road.”

It is evident, from the provisions of that section, that the order of the county court, restraining the opening of the proposed road, if Ingerson’s hedge was, in fact, within the line of it, as surveyed, unless he was paid his damages, was not a final order; because, when his damages came to be assessed and reported to the court, the latter might then decide that the amount, although but just to him, was so large that neither the supposed public good nor the finances of the county would justify its payment, and that, for such reasons, the matter should be dropped. This being the case, it would be absurd to say that the proposed road could be opened a few rods through plaintiff’s land, although it might be stopped when it reached Ingerson’s, adjoining it, for want of legal authority to open it there. The proposed road was an entirety from Shaw’s Bridge to the town of Warren, and it was a mere act of wantonness to attempt to open it through, plaintiff’s possessions and crops in the latter part of spring and early summer of 1871, when nothing had been done for ten years, and when there was no legal authority to carry it farther. By the terms of the order and the constitution of the State, as well as the statute, this proposed road could not be opened through Ingerson’s land; and as by the force of the order the road was an entirety, and by force of the statute the county court was at liberty, and was required to make a further order in the premises before the road could be opened, in case Ingerson’s hedge fell within the line of it, as proposed and designated, the authority to open it through plaintiff’s land was incomplete. In this view, the exclusion of the evidence offered to show that Ingerson’s hedge would be included within the line of it, and giving the instruction that it made no difference whether it did or not, was error.

Error is assigned upon the admission in evidence, against the objection of plaintiff, the admissions, declarations and promise of one Perm, alleged to have been made to the county judge in March, 1870, respecting this road. They were introduced as binding upon Mrs. Dewey, under whom plaintiff held as tenant, on the ground that Perm was the agent of Mrs. Dewey in respect to the lands in question in plaintiff’s occupation. They were made in the absence of Mrs. Dewey and plaintiff, and it is not pretended that Perm was at the time doing any act in respect to the subject matter of the agency. Besides, Perm’s authority in the premises was conferred by power of attorney in writing, given in evidence, and there is no claim that he had any other authority. By the power of attorney he was made the mere special agent of Mrs. Dewey, to rent these lands and collect the rents. There is no authority, express or implied, thereby conferred upon him to do any act in regard to this road; It is a general rule, that where the acts of the agent will bind the principal, there his representations, declarations and admissions, respecting the subject matter, will also bind him, if made at the same time and constituting a part of the res gestee. Story on Agency, §§ 134-137; 1 Greenlf. Ev., § 113.

This evidence, not falling within any legal rule as to admissions of agents against their principals, was mere hearsay, and therefore incompetent.

The court instructed for the defendant that, if the jury believed from the evidence that Ramsey, the defendant, was acting within the scope of his duty as supervisor of road district Ho.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Ill. 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linblom-v-ramsey-ill-1874.