Savage v. Board of County Commissioners

10 Ill. App. 204, 1881 Ill. App. LEXIS 251
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 17, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ill. App. 204 (Savage v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Savage v. Board of County Commissioners, 10 Ill. App. 204, 1881 Ill. App. LEXIS 251 (Ill. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

Higbee, P. J.

This was a common law writ of certiorari issued from the Circuit Court of Cass county on the petition of appellant requiring appellee to cause to be certified to said court, certain proceeding of record in the office of the county clerk of said county, in reference to a supposed public highway described in said petition. '

As a return to the writ, the clerk certified certain records of the county commissioners’ court of said county in reference to said road, showing that a petition was presented to said commissioners’ court at the March term thereof 1869, praying for the laying out and establishing said road, the order of said court appointing viewers, the report of the viewers to the June term following, and the order of said court at said term; finding all the necessary jurisdictional facts, establishing said road, and ordering the supervisor of the proper district to open the same.

Said clerk further certified as a part of his return, a copy of a petition presented to the county board at its June term, 1881, bv one William A. Schasfer, reciting the proceedings aforesaid, and an order issued by the clerk of said court, August 5th, 1869, directing the supervisor of the road district in which said road was located to open the same.

Said petition further set out and averred that the petitioner was interested in said road, as the owner- of land adjacent thereto; that at least one mile of the east end of said road had been opened and used as a public road for over twenty years, and that Charles R. Savage (appellant) did on the first day of June, 1880, obstruct said road by erecting gates across the same. That before putting np said gates he applied to .the neighbors interested in said road and obtained their consent upon his promise that he would remove said gates as soon as he could protect his growing crops by fences.

Petitioner asked the county board to grant him relief by causing said gates to be taken down and the obstructions removed from said road.

Said return also sets out the following order from the records of tlie”proceedings of said county board:

“ In the matter of the petition of William A. Schæffer for removal of June 15, 1881. obstructions placed in county road. )
“ On this eighth day of J une, came said Schaeffer and his attorneys, and also the said Savage and his attorneys, and having heard and considered the said petition, and having heard the testimony of witnesses produced by both said Schaeffer and Savage, and having heard the arguments of their respective attorneys, doth find that the part of said road which is obstructed, to wit: beginning at the northeast corner of the west half of the northwest quarter of section fourteen, township seventeen, north of range eleven, west 3d P. M. in said county, running from thence west one mile, was used by the public as a highway for more than twenty years before the obstructions complained of were placed therein. Such being the consent of the owners of the land over which said road runs.
“That in the spring of 1880, said Charles R. Savage obstructed said above described portion of said road, by building across the same two gateways.
“ That he has refused to remove the same, after having been notified so to do by the proper supervisor of this county.
“Now, this 15th day of June, 1881, it is ordered by this board, that the clerk, James B. Black, issue to said supervisor of the said district in which said obstructions exist, an order to. immediately remove the same from across said portion of said road, herein described.”

This return was duly certified by the clerk under his seal of office.

The Circuit Court of Cass county adjudged this return to be sufficient, quashed the writ of certiorari, and ordered a procedendo to issue to the county court to proceed as required by law.

Appellant brings the cause to this court and assigns error upon the rulings of the trial court in its final -orders disposing of the case.

The common law writ of certiorari is issued from a superior to an inferior court of record, requiring the latter to send to the former some proceedings there pending,, or the record and proceedings of- some cause already terminated, in cases where the procedure is not according to the course of the common law. Bouvier’s Law Dictionary.

It may issue to all inferior tribunals and jurisdictions in cases where they exceed their jurisdiction and in cases where they proceed illegally, and there is no appeal or other mode of directly reviewing their proceedings.

No trial can be had on any issue of fact, hence the writ does not require a return of the evidence or of any facts outside of the record.

The only trial is by inspection of the record, and in the case of Donahue v. Will County, 100 Ill. 101, it is said: If the •circuit court, on the return of the writ, finds from the record that the inferior tribunal had jurisdiction and had not exceeded it, and had proceeded according to law, the writ will be quashed; but, on the contrary, if the court finds that the inferior body had no jurisdiction, or had exceeded it, or had not proceeded according to law, it will quash the judgment and proceedings shown by the return.

Applying these well established rules to the record before us, we tliink the court did not err, as contended by appellant, in refusing to quash the order of the county commissioners’ court, at the June term, 1869, establishing the road in question.

At that time the county commissioners, court, in counties not. under township organization, had exclusive jurisdiction over the subject of laying out new roads. Sec. 20, Chap. 93, Gross’ Stat. 1868. All the preliminary steps seem to have been regular, and no objection appears to the form or substance of the final order.

The particular objection urged to this order is, that it does not show that appellant’s damages were assessed, or agreed upon and released, for the land taken from him.

The commissioners, court had no power to assess the damages, nor had the viewers appointed by them, and hence the order could not show such facts.

Section 43 of the statute above referred to provided, that? when the county authorities had authorized a road to be laid out, and the commissioner, superintendent, or supervisor, authorized to construct the same could not agree with the owner of land to be taken, upon the amount of damages, he should apply to a justice of the peace of the county, who should select three householders, whose duty it should be, after taking the oath required, to assess such damages. The road could not be opened until the damages were agreed upon or assessed and paid, if objected to by the owner; but the fact that the return fails to show such proceedings, does not render the previous order of the commissioners illegal or void, and no reason appears which would authorize the court to quash it.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ill. App. 204, 1881 Ill. App. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savage-v-board-of-county-commissioners-illappct-1882.