Vineyard v. County Court of Roane County

136 S.E. 848, 103 W. Va. 210, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 42
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1927
Docket5839
StatusPublished

This text of 136 S.E. 848 (Vineyard v. County Court of Roane County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vineyard v. County Court of Roane County, 136 S.E. 848, 103 W. Va. 210, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 42 (W. Va. 1927).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

The decree appealed from by F. K. Vineyard, dissolved the temporary injunction granted to him, but did not dismiss his bill. The suit is solely for the purpose of enjoining defendant, the county court, its agents, servants and employees from constructing a county-district road through plaintiff’s lands, because the county court, as it is alleged, has not followed the statutory method and procedure prescribed for the location and establishment, or alteration of a county-district road through plaintiff’s land.

It appears that a county-district road intersected a state road running from Spencer, Roane County, to Clay in Clay County, near a bridge over the Poca River, and the county court desired to change or alter the county-district road from one side of the river to the other, which alteration would run the road through plaintiff’s land for a distance of about 350 feet. No map or indicia of like character from which an intelligent idea of the location of the roads and proposed alteration- with respect to plaintiff’s land, can be found in the record; nor is there any order of the county court which conveys such information.

The substance of the bill is that defendant has a steam shovel near the proposed re-location, and has declared that it will at once enter on plaintiff’s land and construct the road; that such threatened invasion is without authority of law; that defendant has not complied with the statute in respect to alteration of a road, has made no survey or map of the proposed change, giving grades and bearings through his land, and has not attempted to agree with plaintiff on the damages, has given him no hearing, and has never established the proposed location of the road on his lands; that therefore its servants and agents who will enter upon his lands for the purpose *212 of building a road are trespassers, and that he will suffer irreparable damages by the taking of the land. Upon presentation of the bill, an injunction was awarded by vacation order of August 11, 1926. Defendant gave notice that it would move for dissolution on August 21st, at which time it demurred to and answered the bill.

The answer says that defendant has concluded that public necessity demands the re-location of the road through plaintiff’s land for a distance of about 350 feet, and that it proposes to take his land for that purpose, and has complied with the statute in all respects, and hence has authority _to enter and construct the road. The answer prays that plaintiff be inhibited from in any way interferring with its agents, servants and employes in the building of the road. Plaintiff filed his affidavit in support of his bill, to the effect that the county court had not established the road on his lands as required by the statute, and that its member in charge of the matter had notified him that defendant was going to enter at once upon his lands and build the road. On consideration of the bill, answer, affidavit and certain orders of record made by the county court, hereafter considered, the court sustained the motion to dissolve.

Defendant bases it right to enter and take the land upon an order entered of record by it on July 27, 1926, reciting that certain road work was being done near the mouth of Vineyard Run, and that it was considered necessary that a right-of-way should be obtained through the land of plaintiff for a distance of about 350 feet, and to that end the court appointed itself a committee for the purpose of endeavoring to settle said right-of-way and make written report of the result of its endeavor. On August 18, 1926, the committee composed of Joseph Stutler, president, and B. E. Bradley, member, filed its written report as such committee, which was ordered to be recorded, and which report, in substance, says that the committee and Vineyard went upon the ground, and an attempt was made to agree upon the damages, but the attempt failed; and that the right-of-way sought to be pur *213 chased began at the new concrete bridge, thence running down Poca River near the bank and intersecting with the Poca road at a point near the Stock Scales, a distance of about 350 feet. The committee further reported that it deemed it useless to further endeavor to settle with Vineyard for the right-of-way.

In the afternoon of August 10, 1926, defendant served three notices upon plaintiff, to the effect that on September 20, 1926, it would file its petition in the circuit court for condemnation of certain lands of plaintiff to be described in the petition, for the purpose of building a public road, as provided in Sec. 138, Chap. 6, Acts 1923, which road would run from the bridge across Mud Fork on plaintiff’s land to the main county-district road.

Under this recorded order of the county court and report of its committee, and these notices of application to be made for condemnation, did the county court acquire the right to enter upon plaintiff’s land and construct the road? This is the controlling question presented by the pleadings. Plaintiff answers the question in the negative, while the trial court answered in the affirmative by dissolving the injunction. No appearance is made by the county court on this appeal. There is no material conflict of fact.

If a county court concludes that the interests of the people of the county require that a county-district road be established or altered, it must appoint two or more reviewers or a committee of its own body, who together with the county road engineer shall view the ground and report in writing the advantages and disadvantages which will result to individuals as well as to the public from the proposed work, and the grades and bearings of the road proposed, together with the facts and circumstances that may be useful to the county court in determining whether the work should be done, stating specifically whether it would be necessary to take any burying ground, building, etc., the probable cost of the work, the names of the land owners, and the probable damages to each. They are required to report on other routes; and are required to return with their report a map giving grades, bearings and *214 locations. Sec. 137, Chap. 43, Code. If the court decides to do the work, and the compensation to the land owner be not fixed by agreement, it shall order condemnation proceedings, and when damages are ascertained as a result of such proceedings, it may or may not proceed with the undertaking. Sec. 138, same chapter, as amended by Chap. 6, Acts 1923. But by the latter part of that section instead of proceedings to.condemn, the county court may enter upon the lands (other than those prohibited by law) and locate and build the road, and then within 60 days after such entry proceed by petition in the circuit court to ascertain damages by the appointment of five freeholders for that purpose. .It is provided, however, that before entering the lands as provided in said Sec. 138, the county court must serve notice on the owner that the road is to be located upon his land under the authority of that section. It will be seen -by an inspection of said Section 138 that there are two methods by which the court can take lands for road purposes, after it has taken the steps required by {he preceding section and has given the proposed road a legal status. First, after it has the information required by Sec.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 S.E. 848, 103 W. Va. 210, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vineyard-v-county-court-of-roane-county-wva-1927.