Mitchell v. Inhabitants of Linneus

81 A. 945, 108 Me. 478, 1911 Me. LEXIS 122
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 30, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 81 A. 945 (Mitchell v. Inhabitants of Linneus) 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
Mitchell v. Inhabitants of Linneus, 81 A. 945, 108 Me. 478, 1911 Me. LEXIS 122 (Me. 1911).

Opinion

Haley, J.

This is an action of debt upon an award of referees. The case is before the court upon report.

In 1910, the selectmen of the town of Linneus laid out a way in that town, in part over land of A. P. Mitchell, and land of Vernon Mitchell a son of A. P. Mitchell. They made their return to the town and the way, at a town meeting legally called, was duly accepted. They awarded to A. P. Mitchell $100 for damages sustained by him, but made no award for damages sustained by Vernon Mitchell. A. P. Mitchell being dissatisfied with the amount of the damages awarded him, seasonably took an appeal from the award to the Supreme Judicial Court, and the appeal is now pending awaiting the decision in this case.

In August, 1910, there were negotiations between the selectmen of the defendant town, James H. Ruth, Colby Estabrook and Byron R. Stewart, and A. P. Mitchell in reference to settling the claim, or claims, for damages by arbitration, and papers were prepared to submit the question of damages to referees. The papers, or some of them, were signed by two of the selectmen and by A. P. Mitchell, and were afterwards destroyed.

It is claimed by the plaintiffs that the claims of both A. P. Mitchell and Vernon Mitchell were to be submitted, and that the submission was signed by two of the three selectmen . of defendant town. It is claimed by the defendant town that it. was the intention to submit only the claim of Vernon Mitchell for damages ; that after the papers were signed by the selectmen, A. P. Mitchell signed for Vernon, and that they then discovered that Vernon was more than twenty-one years of age, and the selectmen refused to admit the authority of A. P. Mitchell to sign for him, and, as they could not obtain his signature, the attempt to arbitrate was abandoned. The [480]*480following day Mr. Ruth, one of the selectmen and the town agent of the defendant town, met A. P. Mitchell and made an agreement to refer both claims to referees named in the agreement to refer the claims, with the further agreement between them, and the referees, that the award should not be made public until Vernon’s return, which was to be in about ten days, and that if he would then agree to be bound by the award and would sign the submission to the referees, they should file their award.

The referees then viewed the way as laid out, upon which the town was then working, in company with A. P. Mitchell and selectman Ruth. Upon Vernon’s return he was informed of the proceedings, and signed the agreement to submit the claims to arbitration, which is set forth below.

The referees then made public their award, in which they allowed the plaintiffs the sum of $375.

The agreement to arbitrate was as follows :

"Linneus, Me., August 25, 1910.
We, the undersigned, James H. Ruth, in behalf of the town of Linneus, and A. P. Mitchell and Vernon Mitchell, owners of land across which road to avoid Coyle Hill, so called, has been located, do subscribe to the following agreement: —
We are willing to abide by the decision of Matthew Wilson of Houlton and John W. Davidson of Hammond Plantation, as to what damages shall be paid by the town of Linneus to said A. P. Mitchell and Vernon Mitchell for the right of way for said road located by said town of Linneus.
J. H. Ruth for the Town of Linneus.
his mark
A. P. Mitchell X
M. Wilson
Vernon Mitchell.”

This action is brought upon the award, and the defense is:

First. That the selectmen had no authority to arbitrate the claim for damages.

[481]*481Second. That Mr. Ruth, who signed the submission for arbitration, was not authorized to do so, and that his action has never been ratified by the town, or by either of the other two selectmen.

It is undoubtedly true, as claimed by the defendant town, that it is the duty of the selectmen to lay out ways in their town and to assess the damages caused thereby and report their doings to the town. While so engaged they are acting as a court, and they cannot delegate their authority or refer the question of damages for the land taken. Being the court created by law to pass upon the question in the first instance, they cannot avoid their responsibility by referring the question to others.

In this case the municipal officers did assess the damages sustained by A. P. Mitchell in the laying out of the way. They assessed no damages for Vernon Mitchell, over whose land the way as laid out also passed. This was, in fact, as though they had reported that no damages had been sustained by him, and the duty of the court was ended when it made its report and filed it as required by law, and Vernon Mitchell had his right of appeal on the question of damages, as he would have had if an award had been made and he was dissatisfied therewith. Wilson v. Simmons, 89 Maine, 242, and cases cited.

The duties of the selectmen, as a court, as far as the way in question was concerned, ended when their report was filed in the town clerk’s office; but their duties as selectmen of the town, were not ended; as selectmen, they still had charge of its business which included the adjustment and payment of all just claims against the town.

At the time of the reference the appeal of A. P. Mitchell was pending in the Supreme Judicial Court, and it was their duty to protect the interest of the town in that appeal. If Vernon Mitchell had a claim for damages for the taking of his land, or thought he had such a claim, it was their duty to protect the interest of the town in the adjustment of that claim. That being their duty, they had the right to employ counsel to assist them and contest the claim in court. Having the right to settle and adjust, they had the power to do whatever was necessary to settle and adjust, which [482]*482included the right to submit to arbitration. As said by the court in Hallister v. Pawlet, 43 Vt. 425, "The right to settle and adjust includes the right to submit the subject matter in dispute to arbitration. An arbitration is one of the usual ways of settling a disputed claim ; and the selectmen had the right to settle and adjust this claim in any of the usual and ordinary modes of settling and adjusting such claims.”

The same rule was recognized in Fogg v. Dummer, 58 N. H. 505, which was an action on an award where the selectmen had submitted to arbitration, and in which the court say : "It was their duty, as agents, to investigate the plaintiff’s claim, and, in the absence of special instructions by the town, they had the power to submit the merits of the claim to arbitration.

Hine v. Stevens, 33 Conn. 497, which overruled Griswold v. North Stonington, 5 Conn. 367, was an action upon an award, and the court held that the selectmen had authority to submit to arbitration, saying: "The avoiding of a lawsuit by a reference and thereby escaping the delay, the expense and the risk of a jury trial, is in most cases eminently judicious.”

And in City of Somerville v. Charles H. Dickerman, 127 Mass.

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Related

City of Somerville v. Dickerman
127 Mass. 272 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1879)
Inhabitants of Griswold v. Inhabitants of North-Stonington
5 Conn. 367 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1824)
Hine v. Stephens
33 Conn. 497 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1866)
Hollister v. Town of Pawlet
43 Vt. 425 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1871)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 A. 945, 108 Me. 478, 1911 Me. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-inhabitants-of-linneus-me-1911.