Town of Tunbridge v. Town of Royalton
This text of 58 Vt. 212 (Town of Tunbridge v. Town of Royalton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
These cases are petitions under No. 18 of the Acts of 1884, asking to be relieved from liability to support a bridge in the town of Royalton. The petitionee moves to dismiss the petitions for that they are not properly signed. The petition in each case is signed the name of the petitioning town, “by its attorney, S. B. Hebard.” The act authorizing the proceeding reads, “any town, etc., may petition the court.” It nowhere provides for the signing by any particular officer of the town; and we are not aware of any law making it the duty of any officer of the town to sign such petitions. An attorney of the town may as well sign as the town agent or the selectmen. The signature was sufficient.
[213]*213The act in question does not apply to cases pending at the time of its passage; and it is. claimed, that the cause in which it was originally adjudged that the petitioning towns should contribute to the support of the bridge, is still pending, an adjudication in said cause having been had in March, 1881, under R. L. s. 2978, which permits a town to apply every five years for a new apportionment of the expense of maintaining the bridge. It is true, another ajjplication for a re-apportionment cannot be made until March, 1886; but the case is not in court; it is not on the docket of the court, and the court have no power over it in any respect. It was not a pending case at the time of the passage of the Act of 1884.
Again the petitionee urges that this proceeding cannot be sustained until the expiration of five years from the last adjudication under R. L. sec. 2978. There is no sound reason for so holding. Sec. 2978 presupposes the continued liability of the adjoining towns, and merely provides for a change in the apportionment of the expense of maintaining the bridge; hut the Act of 1884 was passed for the purpose of relieving the outside towns entirely from bearing any part of the expense of supporting bridges or roads without their own limits; and application can be made for such relief at any time.
The motion to dismiss is overruled.
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58 Vt. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-tunbridge-v-town-of-royalton-vt-1885.