Town of Sumner v. Peebles

32 P. 221, 5 Wash. 471, 1893 Wash. LEXIS 4
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1893
DocketNo. 652
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 32 P. 221 (Town of Sumner v. Peebles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Sumner v. Peebles, 32 P. 221, 5 Wash. 471, 1893 Wash. LEXIS 4 (Wash. 1893).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Stiles, J.

The first question for determination in this case is: Did the proceedings before the county commissioners of Pierce county, in 1860, and the subsequent facts in regard thereto, constitute a certain road- a county road within the meaning of the general road law of 1859? (Daws of 1859, p. 7.)

The records of the county of Pierce show the following entries concerning the establishment of the road in question:

“1. At the regular May, 1860, term of the board of county commissioners of Pierce county, Washington Territory, the petition of John B. Leach, and twenty-three others of said district, was presented by William M.,Kincaid, the owner of the land on both sides of the road in question, setting forth the public necessity for a road on the north side of the Puyallup river, described in said petition.
“2. Said petition was by order of the commissioners thereupon recorded in the proper record.
“3. At the same term of the board, May 10, 1860, the board appointed viewers of said road, and said order was duly entered.
“4. At a regular term of said board, August 6, 1860, the viewers made their report, containing a detailed statement of their doings, in which they say that they carefully marked their view from point to point.' The report esti[473]*473mated the cost of the view, and was signed by two of the viewers.
“5. The view was thereupon adopted, and duly recorded.
“6. At the regular term of said board, in May, 1863, a petition was presented, signed by eighteen residents of the district named, among whom was John F. Kincaid, after-wards the owner of the land on both sides of the road in question, which petition is as follows: ‘We, the undersigned, citizens of Puyallup valley, Pierce county, Washington Territory, would ask your honorable body to change the road in said valley, beginning at a bridge on the Stuck creek, following the cedar grove on the south side, and running due east about seventy or eighty rods; from thence in a southeasterly direction on the west side of said cedar grove until it intersects the old road.’
“7. Said last named petition was thereupon recorded, and the board at the said term ordered that said petition be granted and that the supervisor, F. C. Meade, be instructed to open the same ‘as now laid out.’ Said order was thereupon recorded.
“8. The first location was traveled, used and known by the public as a county road, and was worked and kept in repair by the county from 1860 to 1874.
“9. The change petitioned for in the last mentioned petition changed said road from one hundred to two hundred feet from its former location to the south, shortened said road and placed it upon higher and better ground.
“10. From 1874 on, as will be hereafter noted, the old road was abandoned, and the line was changed to the location petitioned for in 1863. And from thence to the time of commencing this action, the new location has constituted the county road. ’ ’

Objection is made to the consideration of the original road as a county road, for the reason that so far as appears no order was made by the board declaring the road petitioned for to be established and directing it to be opened.

Sec. 4 of the act in question provides as follows:

“The board of county commissioners shall cause their clerk to enter' in a well bound book their action upon all [474]*474roads which they shall establish, alter or vacate, which book shall be called the' ‘road book’ of the county; in which book all the records concerning the roads at present established in the county shall be entered, and no county road hereafter altered or established shall be opened until the same shall be fully recorded in said book. Said road book shall be a public record, and be kept in the office of the clerk of the board of county commissioners, and shall be open to the inspection of the public.”

As we construe it, the action of the board in directing the petition of Leach and others, for the opening of the road in 1860, to be recorded in the road book, was substantially the granting of that petition. The appointment of viewers was the next step taken toward the opening of the road, and the adoption of the report of the viewers was the final step, and all that was necessary to constitute the establishment and legal opening of the road. The report of the viewers contained a detailed description of the line of the road, and showed that it was marked along its center line from point to point. There is nothing in the statute which definitely declares what shall constitute the establishment or opening of a county road, and it is-not prescribed that there shall be any order declaring the same, but from the negative declaration that ‘ ‘ no county road hereafter altered or established shall be opened until the same shall be fully recorded in said book,” we understand that when in the road book there is entered a petition, the report of viewers, a description of the road and the adoption of the view, the road is thereby and thenceforth established. State v. Dover, 10 N. H. 394. It was said in Harrow v. State, 1 G. Greene, 439, a case arising upon a criminal indictment for obstructing the road, that the road was established when the survey and plat were placed upon record as required by the statute. The statute in that state simply required survey and plat to be recorded. That disposes of the first question, and we think it must be con[475]*475ceded that if the road was thus legally established it was of the width of sixty feet, thirty feet on each side of the line marked by the viewers, since § 7 of the act in question prescribed that county roads should be sixty feet in width unless the commissioners, upon the prayer of the petitioners, determine upon a less width.

The second point in the case grows out of the change ordered in 1863. The road as originally laid out lay entirely within the land of William M. Kincaid. In 1863, John F. Kincaid, who later became the owner of all the land through which the road ran, was one of the petitioners for the change of the line of the road, but whether or not William M. Kincaid was also a petitioner does not appear. This change was ordered with very little formality, under the act of January 29, 1863, which was substantially, if not precisely, the same as the act of 1859. The petition was filed, and on the same day it was ordered granted, and the supervisor was instructed to open the road ‘ ‘ as now laid out.’’

Section 11 of the act provided for cases where persons through whose land a public highway was already established were desirous of turning said road over any other part of their land. Such an individual was himself authorized by petition to apply to the commissioners to permit him to turn the road through any part of his land on good ground and without materially increasing the distance to the injury of the public. The further provision in the section required the appointment of viewers, and authorized the commissioners, upon their favorable report, to order a road to be re-located as prayed for.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 P. 221, 5 Wash. 471, 1893 Wash. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-sumner-v-peebles-wash-1893.