State Ex Rel. Palmer v. Elliff

58 S.W.2d 283, 332 Mo. 229, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 462
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 3, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 58 S.W.2d 283 (State Ex Rel. Palmer v. Elliff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Palmer v. Elliff, 58 S.W.2d 283, 332 Mo. 229, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 462 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

Relators, appellants herein, applied for and obtained from the Circuit Court of McDonald County a writ of certiorari to review the record of the county court of said county in a certain proceeding for the establishment of a private road. Upon a hearing the circuit court quashed the writ previously issued by it and relators appealed. The appeal was granted to the Springfield Court of Appeals which transferred the case to this court on the ground that title to real estate is involved. The case comes to the writer on reassignment.

The petition filed in the circuit court by relators for a writ of *Page 231 certiorari alleges the official character of respondents; that on May 13, 1929, there was commenced before respondents in the county court a proceeding for the establishment of a private road "across the premises of Will S. Morgan and J.D. James for R.C. Parish;" describes the land sought to be taken therefor; alleges that "since the commencement" of said proceedings (time not stated) James' interest in the lands involved had been conveyed to his co-relator, Palmer, and then states the grounds upon which the writ of certiorari is prayed, thus:

"Relators aver that said respondents have taken cognizance of and are proceeding to act in said matter thus brought before them, but that they are therein acting without authority of law and without jurisdiction of the subject matter for the reason that the petition filed in said matter fails to set out the beginning course and termination of said proposed private road as required by law.

"Relators further aver that said proceedings of respondents are altogether outside of the course of the common law and likewise outside of any statutory or judicial proceeding and that no writ of error lies to such proceedings from this or any other court, and no appeal is provided by law or allowed by this or any other court."

[1] It is apparent that relators are not merely contesting the amount of damages awarded or to be awarded in a condemnation proceeding. They challenge the authority and jurisdiction of the county court to proceed with the proposed condemnation and to establish the road under the petition for same which had been presented to it. In effect it may be said they challenge the right of the petitioner, Parish, to have their land taken for the road on the facts stated in the petition. Judgment of the county court establishing the road will give the petitioner an easement in or over relators' lands and directly take from relators that portion of their title. Under the recent decision by Division One of this court in Richter v. Rodgers, 327 Mo. 543,37 S.W.2d 523, and of the court en banc in State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Gordon, 327 Mo. 160, 36 S.W.2d 105, we think title to real estate is involved and that this court therefore has jurisdiction of this appeal.

The petition for a private road presented to the county court by R.C. Parish and which initiated the proceedings in that court states that petitioner is an inhabitant of McDonald County, Missouri, and owns certain described lands situated therein upon which are located his dwelling house and other improvements and upon which he resides; that no public road passes through or touches his said lands and that the road he seeks is a way of necessity; and he asks that a private road twenty feet in width be established, to begin at his premises upon his lands described in the petition and connect with Highway No. 88 at the nearest convenient point thereto, *Page 232

". . . said proposed private road being more particularly described as follows, to-wit:

"Beginning at the premises of your petitioner near the Southeast corner of the Southwest quarter of the Northeast quarter of Section No. One; Township No. Twenty-one; Range No. Thirty-three, thence in a Northeasterly direction up and along Indian Creek, passing across the Southeast quarter of the Northeast quarter and the Northeast quarter of the Northeast quarter of Section No. One; Township No. Twenty-one; Range No. Thirty-three; thence in a Northerly direction, touching the Northwest corner of the Northwest quarter of the Northwest quarter of Section No. six; Township No. Twenty-one; Range No. Thirty-three, to intersect Highway No. 88; said above described course being identical with the road now being used across said above described lands, the whole length of said proposed private road being approximately three quarters of a mile from the beginning thereof to the ending thereof, all in McDonald County, State of Missouri."

[2] Appellants make no point here nor did they below as to the sufficiency of the notice given to interested landowners of the intended presentation to the county court of the petition for private road. The county court's alleged lack of jurisdiction or right to proceed was predicated on the failure of the petition presented to it "to set out the beginning, course and termination of said proposed private road as required by law." Attending to that complaint we note:

Section 7842, Revised Statutes 1929, pursuant to which the proceeding was instituted, provides in substance that if any inhabitant of the State shall present to the county court a petition setting forth that he or she owns a tract or lot of land in the county or in an adjoining county and that no public road passes through or alongside such land and asking for the establishment of a private road from his or her premises to connect at some convenient point with some public road of the county or a road of the state highway system within the county "and shall describe the place where said road is desired, and the width desired, not exceeding forty feet," the court shall appoint three disinterested commissioners "to view the premises and to mark out the road" and to assess damages to the owners of land through which the road will pass.

Section 7845, Revised Statutes 1929, provides that the commissioners, after taking the required oath, shall view the premises and shall cause a road not exceeding forty feet wide "to be marked out so as to be convenient and to do as little injury as practicable to other persons," and shall make a report to the county court "stating the points of beginning and ending, courses, distances and width of *Page 233 said proposed road." The further provision of that section relative to assessment of damages is not here involved.

By Section 7846, when the commissioners have reported and the proceedings have been regular and no objections have been made thereto, the county court shall order that the road be established "according to the report." [N.B. The statute does not say the road shall be established according to the petition.]

Section 7847 authorizes the appointment of new commissioners with like powers and duties as those first appointed "if the proceedings be found by the court to be irregular."

We think it manifest from the foregoing statutory provisions that in a proceeding to establish a private road it is not requisite that the petition therefor should set out the points of beginning and termination and the courses and distances with the exactness necessary in a petition for a public road. The statute does not so specify.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W.2d 283, 332 Mo. 229, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-palmer-v-elliff-mo-1933.