Rousey v. Wood

47 Mo. App. 465, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 7
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 18, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 47 Mo. App. 465 (Rousey v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rousey v. Wood, 47 Mo. App. 465, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 7 (Mo. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

This is an action based on sections-3921, 3922, Revised Statutes, 1879, to recover damages. The answers of the defendants were that a majority of the legal voters of DeKalb county, voting at an election for and against township organization, had voted for such organization, and that said county was governed by, and subject to, the provisions of chapter 162, Revised Statutes, 1879 ; that defendant Wood was a, .roadoverseer of the road district in which plaintiff’s-lands were situated. The defendants justified under an order of the township board of Dallas township, one of the townships in said county, directing the defendant-Wood as road overseer to open and prepare for public use a road over the plaintiff’s land. The other defendants were hands working under Wood in opening the road. The. replication denied the allegations of'the answer.

At the trial the defendants, to maintain the issue in their behalf, offered in evidence the order pleaded in the answer which was as follows:

“ ORDER TO ROAD OVERSEER TO OPEN PUBLIC ROAD.
“To Levi Wood, Road, Overseer of Road District Number 3, in Dallas Township, DeKalb County, Missouri.
“You are hereby notified that in compliance with an order of the board of directors of said township, made on the first day of February, 1886, you are required to open, according to law, forty feet wide so much of the public road lately located and leading from the southeast corner of the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter, section 6, township 59, range 30, running west one mile to the southwest corner of the northwest quarter of said section, township and range as lies in your district.
[469]*469“ Given under my hand, this the first day of February, 1886.
“W. R. Clark,
“Edwin Boyd, Clerk.
“President of Board.”

The introduction of which in evidence, over the-objections of the plaintiff, constitutes the principal ground of plaintiff’s complaint here.

The defendants offered no evidence of the adoption of the statute in relation to township organization. A properly certified copy of the abstract of the returns of the said election, as made out and certified by the clerk and spread upon the records of the county court of the-county, would have, without going further, primafacie established the adoption of the law. R. S. 1879, chap. 167, art. 1; State v. Searcy, 39 Mo. App. 393; State v. Weatherly, 45 Mo. App. 17. This was necessary to-show the authority of the township board to make the order under which defendants sought to justify. The ■adoption of the township organization statute is a matter of option with each county, and whether a particular county had adopted it is a matter always resting in pais. The courts cannot take judicial cognizance-of its adoption. It must be brought to the attention of the court by extrinsic evidence. Robinson v. James, 71 Mo. 582; State v. Hays, 78 Mo. 600; City of Hopkins v. Railroad, 79 Mo. 100; Spurlock v. Dougherty, 81 Mo. 171. This matter was not brought to the-attention of the court in the manner which we have indicated and, therefore, the township board was-without jurisdicton to make the order pleaded and under which defendants justify, unless, as defendants contend, the omission was supplied by parol evidence to which plaintiff made no objection.

An examination of the bill of exceptions sustains this contention. This evidence was inadmissible, and, had an objection been interposed to its introduction at the time, no doubt it would have been excluded ; but [470]*470being admitted without objection on the part of the defendants, we cannot say it was without probative force. It was some evidence, though not the best, that the county had adopted the township organization statute and was acting under its provisions.

Plaintiff further contends that, even if the township board was invested with authority to lay out new roads and order the same opened as provided in sections 28, 29, 30, 31 and 32 of the act approved March 29, 1883, Acts, 1883, pages 206-7, the order offered in evidence was insufficient to justify the acts on the part of the defendants of which complaint is made. Section 30 of the act just named provides that when the township board “shall be of opinion that a road ought to be established, they shall order a survey thereof to be made by the county or other surveyor describing the routes by courses and distances and also the lands over which the road shall pass, etc. Section 31 of the same act provides that, “ whenever the township board of directors shall determine to lay out any néw road or alter any old one, they shall incorporate such survey in an order signed by them declaring such road so altered or laid out to be a public highway, which order with the -petition and plat or survey, shall be filed with the township clérk, etc. Section 30 of the act already referred to provides that ‘ ‘ upon the report of the surveyor it appears that the persons through whose land the proposed road passes have relinquished the right of way, and the damages for the right of way not relinquished have been paid as therein provided, the board may order the road to be opened and the lands over which it passes shall become a highway,” etc. Now it is obvious that the report of the surveyor describing the routes by courses and distances, and also the land over which the road will pass, is part of the judgment of the township board declaring the road laid out to be a public highway. It is this judgment or order which it is the duty of the overseer of highways to execute. [471]*471The statute does not require that the order of the board for the opening of the road shall specially enjoin that duty upon the overseer of highways. The provisions of the act defining the duties of that officer imposes that duty. The order or judgment determining and declaring that the road shall be laid out, signed by the board of directors, coupled with the order that it shall be opened, is all, and the only precept, writ or process, which confers upon the overseer of highways the authority to open the road laid out.

The order pleaded and offered in evidence has not incorporated in it the report of the surveyor describing the routes by courses and distances, the land over which the road passes, nor the other facts in respect to the relinquishment of the right of way, the assessment and payment of the damages, etc., as required by said sections 30 and 31. But it may be contended that the statute provides for two orders, the one declaring the road laid out and the other that it be opened, the latter specially directed to the overseer of highways, which we do not think to be the fact; but, if so, we do not see how the survey can any more be dispensed with in the latter than in the former order. The survey is intended in a large measure for the guidance of the overseer of highways in opening the road. The order directs the opening of the road on a line dividing equally a section of land from the east to the west; whether the strip, forty feet wide, over which the road passes is to be found on the north or south side of this dividing line, or whether it bestrides the line, or upon whose lands it is to' be opened, or whether the right of way has been in any way acquired, the order in question did not inform the overseer.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Mo. App. 465, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rousey-v-wood-moctapp-1892.