Pillsbury v. Town of Wheelock

290 A.2d 42, 130 Vt. 242, 1972 Vt. LEXIS 263
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedApril 4, 1972
Docket38-71
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 290 A.2d 42 (Pillsbury v. Town of Wheelock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pillsbury v. Town of Wheelock, 290 A.2d 42, 130 Vt. 242, 1972 Vt. LEXIS 263 (Vt. 1972).

Opinion

Shangraw, C.J.

In August of 1969 the plaintiffs, freeholders and residents of the Town of Wheelock, petitioned the selectmen of the town to lay out a public highway on what is referred to as Old Town Road No. 41. This road runs from Stannard Mountain Road (State Aid Road No. 1) through a field occupied and used by Raeburn and Erma Baker to the boundary line of property owned by Lucien and Jeannette Leroux.

The selectmen failed to lay out the requested highway, and as a consequence the plaintiffs herein brought a petition to the Caledonia County Court under the provisions of 19 V.S.A. § 461.

Commissioners were appointed under the provisions of 19 V.S.A. § 462 to hear and determine the issues involved. Having completed their hearings and inquiries, the commissioners ordered the proposed highway laid out by returning a certain trail, formerly known as the Old Town Road No. 41, to a full public highway status and assessed certain damage payments. Their order stated that all persons interested in or affected by the laying out of the highway had been heard.

The commissioners’ report was filed with the Caledonia County Court. Acting under the provisions of 19 V.S.A. § 469, the plaintiffs, the Town of Wheelock and Lucien Leroux, for whose benefit the road was proposed, filed objections to the *244 report. Hearings were held by the court under the provisions of 19 V.S.A. § 470. Findings of fact were made and filed and the order of the commissioners generally confirmed, except for some particulars not at issue in this appeal.

The county court proceedings to lay out highways under 19 V.S.A. §§ 461-471, the propriety and necessity of establishing a highway in a particular place is a question of fact, which in the last resort is to be determined exclusively by the county court. Bolles v. Montpelier, 93 Vt. 513, 108 A. 565 (1920).

Construing these statutes, this Court has held that the report of the commissioners establishing a highway is not binding upon the court, and is only prima facie evidence of a legal necessity for its establishment, and that on objections to the report the court will inquire into and determine for itself, upon proper evidence taken and produced before it, whether the commissioners have arrived at a just and proper conclusion. Gray v. Middletown, 56 Vt. 53 (1884); Bolles v. City of Montpelier, supra, 93 Vt. at 517.

It is from the Caledonia County Court’s judgment order that the appeal to this Court is taken by the Town of Wheelock and Raeburn and Erma Baker.

The first challenge to the proceedings raised here by the appellants is one based on a claimed jurisdictional ground. Specifically, it is urged that the commissioners appointed by the county court lacked jurisdiction to order the laying out of the highway, by reason of the absence of notice to Dartmouth College.

At one time all land in the Town of Wheelock was impressed with an annual rental for the benefit of Dartmouth College. It appears that the land crossed by the trail and now restored to public highway status may be still subject to an annual lease payment to Dartmouth College. On the facts this is unclear. See Morgan v. Cree, et al., 46 Vt. 773-75 (1861).

The claim of the appellants is that since Dartmouth College appears to be an interested party, and it does not affirmatively appear that it had notice of the hearings to be conducted by the commissioners, the entire proceedings are rendered void.

Dartmouth College did not participate in any of the hearings before the commissioners or the county court. While the county *245 court categorically states in its findings that all interested parties had been notified of the proceedings to lay out the highway, no claim is made by the appellees that such notice was in fact given the college.

Unless dismissal is proper under V.R.C.P. 19, failure to join a proper party will not terminate an action. The issue as to whether dismissal is proper or not is one to be raised below, since the rule requires that the proposed party be found to be indispensable in terms of V.R.C.P. 19(a) and not available to be joined under V.R.C.P. 19(b). If the shaping of relief, attended by protective provisions in the judgment, can assure an unprejudicial result as to all interested parties, no dismissal will follow. Previous practice in this state has been consistent with this standard. Patch v. Squires, 105 Vt. 405, 412-13 (1933).

Nothing has been made to appear that would make it unjust to adjudicate the interests of the parties now of record just as was done in the Patch case, supra. It is not for the appellants to raise, for their benefit, interests or concerns applicable only to Dartmouth College, particularly when they are advanced for the first time in this court.

The defendants next claim that there is no necessity to lay out a public highway over the Old Town Road No. 41.

Raeburn Baker has been a resident of and a landowner in the Town of Wheelock for twenty-five years. He is a farmer and uses the Old Town Road for pasture over which the proposed highway would be laid out.

Luden and Jeannette Leroux have been residents of the Town of Wheelock for about twenty years. At one time Mr. and Mrs. Leroux lived in a farmhouse which was located on or near the Stannard Mountain Road. In May of 1969 they sold a portion of their farm, including their prior residence, to Alfred N. Whiting and Albert R. Jones, Jr. In March of 1970, the Leroux’ moved into a home which Mr. Leroux started to build in 1969 on their remaining land. They also contemplate building two more houses on the lands now occupied by them.

It is the claim of Mr. and Mrs. Leroux that the only access to their residence is by way of the Old Town Road No. 41 route. *246 Their children attend public school. They are. transported by bus and picked up on State Aid Road No. 1 at Town Road 41. Between this intersection and their house, there is no road passable by vehicle at all seasons of the year.

Appellants, in support of their contention that there is no need to lay out the proposed highway over the Old Town Road 41, assert that the Leroux land borders on Town Road 40 and Town Road 46. The record reveals that Town Road 40 does not go to the border of the Leroux land. The court determined that it would have to be extended approximately 874 feet to reach the Leroux property and then Leroux would have to build a way to get to his home some 1,292 feet over heavy wooded terrain at a cost of about $6,000. It would also have to cross over land of other persons to get to their property.

To arrive at Route 46 from the Leroux house it would be necessary to travel about one mile over their land. The evidence is conflicting as to whether the Leroux land borders on Town Road 46. However, the court determined that the shortest way for Mr. Leroux to arrive at an existing public highway from his house was over Old Town Road 41.

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Bluebook (online)
290 A.2d 42, 130 Vt. 242, 1972 Vt. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pillsbury-v-town-of-wheelock-vt-1972.