State v. Inhabitants of Oxford

65 Me. 210, 1876 Me. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 65 Me. 210 (State v. Inhabitants of Oxford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Inhabitants of Oxford, 65 Me. 210, 1876 Me. LEXIS 46 (Me. 1876).

Opinion

Danforth, J.

It appears that at the December term, 1870, of this court for Oxford county an indictment was found against the town of Oxford for a defective way and at the September term, 1871, a verdict of guilty was rendered; whereupon exceptions were allowed, and overruled August 14,1872. Nothing further appears to have been done until the March term, 1878, when this entry was made upon the docket, “Fine of two thousand dollars imposed; unless the road is repaired or discontinued before next term an agent to be appointed outside of Oxford.” A certificate [211]*211of this entry was sent to the assessors of the respondent town. At the next following term, the presiding justice having been of counsel, no action was had other than a continuance of the case to the December term, 1873, when an agent was appointed. December 27,1873, a notice of the fine and of the appointment of an agent was served upon one of the assessors of said town. At the September term, 1874, the court ordered the fine to be paid to the agent on or before the first day of December then next. A notice of which order was duly served upon the assessors September 26,1874. At the March term, 1875, more than four months having elapsed since the assessors had notice of the fine and they having failed to assess the amount or to comply with the order of court, upon motion of the attorney for the state, the presiding justice directed a warrant for the collection of the fine to issue. To this direction exceptions are taken.

It may be conceded as claimed by counsel that all the preliminaries prescribed by the statute to lay the foundation for the warrant must be complied with before it can issue. In this respect several alleged defects are relied upon.

The first objection is an alleged defect in the notice of the imposition of the fine served upon the respondents December 27, 1873. It is claimed that the notice was of a fine imposed at the December term, 1873, when in fact the fine was imposed at the previous March term, and that it was not given “forthwith” as required by the statute. The first of the objections does not seem to have a foundation in fact. It is true the notice is dated as of the December term when it was undoubtedly issued, but the language is, “a fine of two thousand dollars has been imposed” without indicating the time when it was done. No injury could result to the town from this omission, if such it were ; for the time for making the assessment must date from the service of the notice and not from the time when the fine was levied. But we do not deem it an omission, as the statute nowhere requires it, nor does-there seem to be any necessity for it.

The second objection to the notice is equally invalid. It is true the statute, It. S., c. 18, § 71, requires that when a fine is imposed’ the clerk is to certify it “forthwith” to the assessors. This- pro-[212]*212vision, however, is not a condition precedent to the assessment of the amount, but is merely directory to the clerk. It is true that the notice must first be given, but it cannot be true that the legislature intended that all prior proceedings in such cases should fail merely from a temporary neglect of the clerk from which as already seen no harm could accrue to the respondents.

■ But another sufficient answer to this objection is that in contemplation of law the notice was given forthwith. It was given at once, or as early as it could have been after the fine became absolute. ■ When first imposed it was only conditional. It must be presumed that for the benefit of the town, for no other reason appears, no agent was to be appointed and of course no fine collected, if the road should be repaired or discontinued before the then next term. Of this condition the town authorities must be presumed to have had knowledge. There was then no fine to be assessed or collected and no occasion for notice until the failure of a compliance with the condition appeared. This could not appear at the next term as that was holden by a justice who had been of counsel in the case; but at the subsequent term it did appear action was taken and notice both of the fine and an appointment of an agent forthwith given.

Another objection urged is that the agent was not legally appointed.' It is true as claimed, that he was not appointed at the same term at which the fine was imposed. It is also true that there is no law requiring it. The statute, B. S., c. 18, § 70, provides: “The court imposing them (fines) is to appoint one or more agents to superintend the collection and application of them.” This was done, not perhaps at the same term but by the same court. A change of terms does not change the court, though it may, the presiding justice.

It is further claimed that before the appointment of the agent the road had been discontinued and thus one of the contingencies named in the order having been complied with, the power to appoint, ceased. If this were true in fact it might be a valid objection to anything more than a nominal fine and costs. But we find no facts upon which it can rest. The testimony relied upon is the record of the proceedings of the commissioners for the county of [213]*213Oxford, and it is claimed that these records cannot be impeached collaterally. This is undoubtedly a sound legal proposition if that board had jurisdiction. But if otherwise their judgment is a mere nullity and must be so treated. Small v. Pennell, 31 Maine, 267.

In this case the records neither show a jurisdiction nor a want of it. They describe a way lying within the county of Oxford but they do not show that it is not a part of a way lying in two or more counties. On the other hand the case finds that the way in question is a part of a way in two counties and that it was located by the joint action of the commissioners for Oxford and Cumberland counties. Still it is claimed that in such cases after the location, the commissioners of one of the counties though which such a way runs, have jurisdiction upon a petition for the discontinuance of that part which lies within their own county. If there were no other statute provisions than those referred to by the counsel possibly his position might be sustained. It is however a familiar principle of law that nothing is to be presumed in favor of the jurisdiction of an inferior tribunal, nor are we to infer a conflict of jurisdiction unless a fair construction of the statutes requires it. Commissioners derive all their authority from the statutes and to them alone we must look for its extent and limitation.

The chapter of the Revised Statutes relating to ways provides two distinct and separate tribunals for the location, alteration and discontinuance of highways; the commissioners for each county and those of two or more counties acting jointly. It would indeed be a serious defect in the law if the jurisdiction of those two tribunals were in any respect conflicting. But no such defect exists. The duty of the former is confined to roads in their own county, and no provision of law has been pointed out which is even claimed to authorize any jurisdiction beyond this. The duty of the latter relates to ways in two or more counties and is confined to such ways. There can be no conflict between two such tribunals. But it is argued that notwithstanding this road was located by the joint action of two boards, still when so located the authority of the two boards ceased and either might legally [214]*214discontinue that part which lies within its own county.

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Bluebook (online)
65 Me. 210, 1876 Me. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-inhabitants-of-oxford-me-1876.