Schilling v. Carl Township

235 N.W. 126, 60 N.D. 480, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 193
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 235 N.W. 126 (Schilling v. Carl Township) 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
Schilling v. Carl Township, 235 N.W. 126, 60 N.D. 480, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 193 (N.D. 1931).

Opinion

*483 Burr, J.

The plaintiff brought action, against the township to recover compensation for private property taken and damaged in the laying out of a road. The facts necessary to a proper understanding of the case will be stated later. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $400 and from the judgment entered thereunder the defendant appeals.

There are nineteen specifications of error which, with various subdivisions, present some thirty-two propositions; but, as stated by the appellant himself:

“Appellant’s contentions when boiled down resolve themselves into the following major propositions: • '
“1. That the defendant as a matter of law is not liable for the cause of action set out in the complaint, or the cause of action testified to by the witnesses and shown by the testimony.
“2. That the road was on the land when the plaintiff purchased same; that the only one who sustained any damages, if any, was the original owner of the land, namely, the owner at the time such road was constructed; that such owner has never assigned its or his cause of action for same to the assignors who assigned to the plaintiff.
“3. That the defendant’s officers did not commit the trespass; that if anyone committed a trespass it was the board of county commissioners of Grant County.
“4. That the alleged cause of action is barred by the statute of limitations.
“5. That there is no competent evidence establishing any damages under the pleadings.
“6. No verified claim presented to the board.
“7. Reversible error in the court’s ruling on the testimony and the defendant’s motions, and in the court’s instructions.”

The complaint alleges that:

“The said defendant . . . did wrongfully and unlawfully . . . and as naked trespassers, enter upon the said above described real estate and did take possession of a strip of said land 66 feet in. width and *484 extending direct from tbe quarter corner of tbe south line of said section to the quarter corner of the north line of said section, and did assume to establish a public highway across the center of the tillable land of said section . . . and did grade a public highway entirely across said section; . . . that he has been and will be put tó a great inconvenience . . . that the road or highway actually occupies eight acres of said tillable land and forms a barrier between the east and west portions of said section. That by reason of the building of said road as aforesaid, it will be necessary for the plaintiff to build and maintain two miles of fence, etc..; that he presented to the defendant a duly certified claim in the sum of $800- covering said damage.”

Tie says further that he was not the owner of the land at the time the road was established but that the then owner assigned to him the interest which he had in the cause of action, and that he now owns “the entire cause of action stated.”

The answer contains a general denial and then alleges:

“That on or about the month of May, 1921, the defendant, pursuant to statute in said case made and provided, duly and legally condemned and laid out as a public highway along the quarter section line in the section designated in paragraph three of the complaint; that said proceedings were all due, legal and regular and in compliance with the statute, and that pursuant thereto damages were then and there paid by the township to the defendant owner and possessor of said land, which were accepted by said owner, and possessor in full settlement thereof.”

The answer further alleges that:

“The plaintiff granted and conveyed to the defendant the right to establish a highway as aforementioned and that said highway was placed on said land in accordance with specific instructions and request of the then owner of said land and that the then owner of said land waived all claims for damages thereto by reason of such road.”

There are allegations of the claim being barred by the statute of limitations and that the township is not subject to suit.

Whatever criticism may be levelled at some of the terms used in the complaint it is clear the action is not one for closing a road, nor enjoining the use; but for compensation for private property taken and for private property damaged by the township in its attempt to open *485 and maintain a road. The complaint asks merely for a money judgment for an amount specified, with costs, though plaintiff does include in his prayer a request for “all further necessary proper relief.” The township rests its case distinctly on its power to condemn land for road purposes, and its alleged compliance with the law regulatory thereof.

The pleadings dispose of any issue as to the laying out of the road by the township, and these allegations are amply sustained by whatever testimony was introduced. The record shows the road is a township road, — the defendant so alleges — though the county graded and furnished assistance in the maintenance. There is no proof whatever of the completion of condemnation proceedings by the township — in fact the proof establishes the contrary, and defendant abandoned this claim. William Jessum, a member of the township board of 1921, testified that no money was paid any one for that road, while he was on the board, and he knew of no conveyance or easement given, and would have known if there had been any. The record shows the township board was anxious to have a mail route established and owing to the topography of the country found it more convenient to run the road through the section 'than to follow the section lines. Thus it is clear the township took the property, keeps and maintains a road thereon; but has not paid compensation therefor.

The plaintiff did not become the owner until after the road was established. There was some attempt made by the defendant to show that at the time work was commenced on the road the township made settlement with the then owner of the land; but as this testimony was based upon statements made by an alleged agent with no proof of agency and proper objection was made, it has no probative value. The case arises from the act of the township' in establishing a road through the land which plaintiff now owns, without paying compensation, and in' keeping and maintaining that road thereon. The plaintiff rests his case upon his right to consider the road as established and to recover compensation for the property taken and the property damaged.

Appellant’s first contention — that it is immune from liability under the facts of the case — cannot be sustained. The fact remains the township took the land for a road, legally or illegally, and has kept and maintained a road thereon ever since. Private property was in fact taken for a public use. It was taken by a township which had *486 a right to take it for that purpose. The purpose was legal though the method used was unlawful.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
235 N.W. 126, 60 N.D. 480, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schilling-v-carl-township-nd-1931.