Lord v. County Commissioners

75 A. 126, 105 Me. 556, 1909 Me. LEXIS 132
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 26, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 75 A. 126 (Lord v. County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lord v. County Commissioners, 75 A. 126, 105 Me. 556, 1909 Me. LEXIS 132 (Me. 1909).

Opinion

King, J.

Hiram C. Lord and twenty-one others petitioned the Supreme Judicial Court for Cumberland county, Maine, for a writ of certiorari to quash the record of the proceedings of the County Commissioners of said county in laying out a town way in the town of Naples. At the October term, 1908, of said court the writ was ordered and in obedience thereto the Commissioners certified up the full record of their proceedings. At the January term, 1909, of said court the presiding Justice, after hearing, denied a motion that the record of the Commissioners be quashed, and directed the writ of certiorari to be quashed. The case is before the Law Court on exceptions to that ruling.

In the recent case of Stevens v. Co. Com., 97 Maine, 121, this court, reviewing the authorities, restated the well settled doctrine that although it has been the uniform practice to hear the whole case upon the petition for the writ of certiorari, nevertheless, the judgment upon the petition granting the writ and ordering the record sent up is not a judgment that the record when sent up in response to the writ is to be quashed. When the record has been certified up as directed in the writ the question whether the petitioners are entitled to have the record quashed is then to be determined upon the record as certified. That is the question to be determined here.

Numerous alleged errors in the proceedings are set out in the petition but they may all be condensed into two, and in fact they are so considered in the brief of the learned counsel for the petitioners : (1) That notice of the time and place of the Commissioners1 meeting was not given in compliance with the statute; (2) That the Commissioners did not adjudicate that the municipal officers had unreasonably neglected and refused to lay out the way.

There is, however, at the threshold of the case another question to be determined the decision of which is, we think, decisive of the matter before us. Are the petitioners for the writ of certiorari shown to have such an interest in the proceeding sought to be quashed as entitles them to maintain the writ? We think not. They are not parties to the record sought to be quashed. None of [559]*559them appear to have been petitioners to the municipal officers for the way, or to the Commissioners. The way is not laid out over their land. The only ground for their claim of right to petition for this writ is that they "are citizens and taxpayers of said town of Naples.” If for this reason they have the right to petition for certiorari to quash the laying out of this town way, then for a like reason has each citizen and tax payer of the town a like right. But to permit that would be both unreasonable and contrary to precedent.

In the early case of Bath Bridge & Turnp. Co., Pet’rs, v. Magoun & als., 8 Maine, 292, Mellen, C. J., speaking of the writs of error and certiorari, said: "They are alike in this, that no one but a party to the record, or one who has a direct and immediate interest in it or is privy thereto, can maintain either of those writs. . . . Numerous cases have occurred, and many are reported, in respect to the location of roads, &c. but they have always been prosecuted by those having a direct, legal, statute interest in the proceedings complained of. As our laws on this subject now stand, the individuals whose land is appropriated for the road have a direct interest of a pecuniary character. So has the county, because liable by law to pay the owner the estimated value of the land so appropriated. So has the town, because by law bound to make the road and keep the same in repair.” In Levant v. Co. Com., 67 Maine, page 434, it is said: "The petitioner should have a direct interest in the proceedings sought to be quashed.” In Vol. 4, page 172, Encyc. PI. and Prac. the author says: "Proceedings to establish, alter, maintain or repair roads and highways will not be reviewed on the application of private citizens who apply for the writ in their own behalf when such applicants have no special property rights or interests involved.” In Vanderstolph v. Highway Com’r, 50 Mich. 330, the petitoner was interested only as a tax payer in the town, and Graves, C. J., there said: "We think this interest is too remote and too indirect and indefinite to warrant this remedy, and that any sanction of the proceeding would be an improper exercise of discretion.”

[560]*560Conklin v. Fillmore County, 13 Minn. 454, is another case where the question was whether a mere tax payer could prosecute a writ of certiorari to quash the laying out of a road in his .town. Wilson, C. J., there said: "I think the plaintiff has not a right to-prosecute this action. He does not show or pretend that he is damnified more or otherwise than any other resident of the town. The injury- — if any — is to the community, not to him in his individual capacity, and it is for them, not for him, to redress it. If one member of the community in his individual capacity has a remedy for such an injury, so has every other member. To permit this would be intolerable and contrary to all precedent and reason. This objection cannot properly be passed over in silence.” In the case before us the petitioners for the writ of certiorari have no "direct, legal, statute interest in the proceedings complained of.” They are injured, if at all, only as other taxpayers are injured, and that may be to pay some small amount for building and maintaining this way, if they are and continue to be property owners in the town. Such an injury is too remote and too small for the law to notice and redress.

But if the petitioners were entitled to prosecute the writ an examination of the record as certified up shows that the alleged errors complained of are not such in fact.

I. As so the notice. .Sec. 2, chap. 23, R. S., provides that the Commissioners "shall cause thirty days notice to be given of the time and place of their meeting by posting copies of the petition with their order thereon, in three public places in each town in which any part of the way is, and serving one on the clerks of such towns, and publishing it in some newspaper, if any, in the county.”

The Commissioners ordered such notice to be given in this case. The same section of the statute provides that "The fact that notice has been so given being proved and entered of record, shall be sufficient for all interested, and evidence thereof.”

The record shows that the Commissioners found as a fact, and entered the same in their record, that it was "then and there satisfactorily proved to us that all the notices named in said order had been duly and seasonably published, served and posted, and that [561]*561all the requirements thereof had been fully complied with.” Thus the record certified up shows a full compliance with the requirements of the statute as to notice. But the petitioners attempt to show dehors the record that it is not true ; that the notice actually published, served and posted did not contain a copy of the petition because the names of all the petitioners were not copied, but only that of the first, "M. S. Brackett,” with the addition "and thirty-six others.” If there were merit in such objection to the notice it could not avail the petitioners.

"When the writ issues the court can act only on the record as produced. No evidence aliunde is receivable” White v. Co. Com., 70 Maine, page 326. See also to same effect Cushing v. Gay, 23 Maine, 16; Pike v. Herriman, 39 Maine, 52;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 A. 126, 105 Me. 556, 1909 Me. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lord-v-county-commissioners-me-1909.