Mercer County v. Sailer

181 N.W. 885, 47 N.D. 203, 1921 N.D. LEXIS 100
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 181 N.W. 885 (Mercer County v. Sailer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mercer County v. Sailer, 181 N.W. 885, 47 N.D. 203, 1921 N.D. LEXIS 100 (N.D. 1921).

Opinion

Christianson, J.

This controversy involves the establishment of a highway. The highway was laid out by an order of the board of county commissioners of Mercer county on September 2, 1919. The defendant, being the owner of a tract of land over which the highway was laid out, appealed to the district court from said order of the county commissioners. In the notice of appeal it is stated: “This-appeal is taken from all of the proceedings had in said matter and each and every part of said proceedings, including the amount' of damages allowed. The amount allowed being only the taxable valuation of said property, and no other damages, and that the appellant claims that the laying out of said highway across the above-described land is [205]*205unnecessary as the section line may be used, and the appellant claims further that should the highway he laid out according to the order of the commissioners he will suffer damages in the amount of $2,000, while the amount awarded by the commissioners will amount to about $150.”

In the district court, the case was submitted to the jury for a special verdict.

The following questions and answers were embodied in such verdict:

1. Is it practical to build a road on the section line ? No.

2. What would be the cost of constructing a serviceable road on the section line? Three thousand dollars.

3. What would be the actual value of the land taken for road purposes if it is laid out as attempted by the county commissioners ? Fifty dollars per acre.

4. What would be the incidental damages to the owner’s property, other than the value of the land, in case the road is laid out as attempted by county commissioners ? No damages.

The record shows that the questions were prepared by one of the parties to the controversy, and submitted to the court; that the court submitted the questions to the other party, and that no objection whatever was made thereto. Upon the return of the verdict the court made an order for judgment, in which the special verdict was set forth; and in which it was further recited that the court “found and determined that the use to which the parcels of land hereinafter described are to be applied is a public use, authorized hy law, and that tho taking of said lands is necessary for such use.” In such order for judgment it was in effect ordered and adjudged that a highway had been, and was thereby adjudged to be, established over the premises of the appellant; that an easement existed in and to the parcels of land so taken for highway purposes; and that the appellant, Christian Sailer, be awarded damages in the sum of $162.50 for the land taken.

Subsequently the appellant, Sailer, moved in the alternative for a new judgment notwithstanding the verdict, or for a new trial. The motion was denied. This appeal, however, is from the judgment alone.

[206]*206On this appeal it is contended that the proceedings before the county commissioners were irregular and invalid because there was no petition for the establishment of the highway referred to in the judgment and in the ordér of the county commissioners; that the petition and notice of hearing thereof was not posted in the manner prescribed by law; that the order establishing the highway was not filed with the county auditor within the time prescribed by law; that no surveyor was employed to run levels and establish a grade line, and that no profile of a survey establishing such grade line was filed with the county auditor.

In our opinion these objections are all unavailing. The record shows that there was a petition presented, signed by the requisite number of qualified petitioners, asking for the establishment of a highway running north and south 1 mile between sections 22 and 23, township 146, range 85, in Mercer county. The petition is in the usual form. There is an affidavit showing that copies of the petition were posted on June 24,1919, in three of the most public places in the vicinity of the aforesaid road. The notice of hearing on the petition is in the record, and is in the usual form, and gives the descriptions of the tracts of land through which the road will pass and the names of the occupants thereof. In such notice the matter is set for hearing on September 2, 1919, at 10 o’clock a. m. at the county auditor’s office. There is an affidavit showing that copies of such notice were posted on August 22, 1919, at three of the most public places in Mercer county; to wit, one copy at the courthouse, one at the postoffice, and one at the village hall, — all in Stanton, the county seat of said county. It also appears that notice was sent to the appellant by registered mail. It further appears that the county commissioners employed a surveyor to survey and lay out the proposed road, and his report and a plat of the road and land adjacent thereto were made a part of the order establishing the highway. From such plat it appears that the greater portion of the section line runs through what, on the plat, is denominated in part low ground-and in part slough. The road as laid out commences at the southern terminus designated in the petition, and follows the section line (the route designated in the petition) for a distance of some 45 rods and over; it then diverges in a westerly direction and goes on the west side of the slough and low ground (traversed by the [207]*207section line), and continues to so diverge until it intersects the section line running along the north side of said sections 22 and 23 at a point 533 feet west of where the section line running north and south between said sections 22 and 23 intersects said section line running along the north side of said sections; and from the said point of intersection due west to the northwest corner of section 22.

The board of county commissioners concededly had jurisdiction to receive and act upon a petition to lay out or alter a highway. Comp. Laws 1913, § 1921. And “whenever the expense of constructing a highway or any part thereof is to be borne by the county, the board of county commissioners thereof have the power to deviate from section and town lines, and condemn and purchase right of way from such highway, whenever, in their opinion, the cost of constructing and maintaining such highway shall be materially decreased, provided that the cost of obtaining such right of way shall bo borne by the county.” Comp. Laws 1913, § 1922. There is no doubt but that the petition presented in this case was sufficient, both as to form and as to the number and qualifications of signers. It is unnecessary to determine, and we express no opinion, as to whether a highway was or was not already established along the section line by virtue of the Federal grant of 1866, and the acceptance of such grant by the territorial legislature in 1871. See Koloen v. Pilot Mound Twp. 33 N. D. 529, 537, L.R.A. 1917A, 350, 157 N. W. 672. The board of county commissioners of Mercer county was concededly the only body which was vested with original jurisdiction to receive and act upon a petition for the opening, vacating, or changing of a highway in the territory involved in this controversy. Section 1924-, Comp.

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Bluebook (online)
181 N.W. 885, 47 N.D. 203, 1921 N.D. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercer-county-v-sailer-nd-1921.