Wilson v. Township Board

49 N.W. 572, 87 Mich. 240
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 49 N.W. 572 (Wilson v. Township Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Township Board, 49 N.W. 572, 87 Mich. 240 (Mich. 1891).

Opinion

Long, J.

This is "a certiorari to the township board of the township of Burr Oak, St. Joseph county, to review its action in overruling the proceedings of the highway commissioner of that township, who refused to lay out a highway, and the order made by the township board laying out and establishing the same. The errors assigned upon which the writ of certiorari was allowed are:

[241]*2411. Said board erred in' allowing the said members objected to, to sit, under the evidence produced, without a showing to the contrary, to hear and determine the questions before them, on account of personal interest.
“2. The board erred in refusing to quash the proceedings for the< want of the proper service of notice on the owners and occupants of said lands prior to the laying out of the same by the commissioner.'
“3. The board erred in deciding that proper notice was given of the said appeal.
“4. The said board erred in laying out said highway under the record and evidence, or that they were duly authorized to lay out said highway after such objections were made.
“5. Deponent claims that the whole proceedings to lay out said highway are void, for the reason that a part of the owners and occupants of the said lands to be condemned for said highway purposes were not notified by the highway commissioner of said township of the said proceedings to lay 6ut the same, and that the said board had no jurisdiction to act in the premises under the statute on appeal, where the commissioner has refused to lay out a highway.
"6. The said board erred in not assessing to Lucy Wilson her share of the damages to her, instead of assessing the whole to William Wilson
“7. The said board erred in fixing the payment of the damages to the several parties February 1, 1892, after appropriating the lands.
“8. Also for the reason that it nowhere appears who were the actual owners of said lands to be taken away, nor why substituted service was made, instead of personal, on the owners and occupants.”

It appears from the return that the petition was presented to the highway commissioner, signed by about 30 residents of the township, to lay'out a highway therein, in pursuance of which, on August 18, 1890, the commissioner gave the notice required by statute, that he wouid meet at the house of William Wilson, in said township, on the 1st day of September thereafter, at 10 o’clock A. m., to proceed to view the premises described [242]*242in the application and notice, and ascertain and determine the necessity of laying out the highway described in the application and notice, and to appraise the damages thereon. The proof of service of these notices is by the affidavit of the commissioner, subscribed and sworn to on the 25th day of August, 1890, in which he states that on the 19th day of August he served notice (of which a copy was attached) upon William Wilson and George Morris, and on the 20th day of August, 1890, upon E. Brown, occupants of these lands through which the proposed highway was petitioned to be opened, by delivering said notices personally to the said William Wilson and George Morris, and leaving said notice at the residence of said E. Brown with one of the family, and acquainting her with its contents. The affidavit further shows that the commissioner also posted notices of like form in three public places in the township, showing the time and places of posting the same.

The commissioner made a return of his proceedings, showing the application made to him by more than seven residents of said township to lay.out the highway; the giving of the notice as required by law; and that on the 1st day of September, 1890, .at 10 o’clock a. m., he was present at the place named in such notice, to view the premises, and determine the necessity of laying out such highway; and he returned, further, that he did not consider such highway necessary to the public good, and that he denied such application.

An appeal was taken by one Heni’y Lamp, a resident and freeholder of said township, to the township board; the applicant stating that he conceived himself aggrieved by the determination of the commissioner of highways in refusing to lay out the same, and that the appeal was made to reverse the entire decision of said highway com[243]*243missioner. Notice of this appeal was given by the township clerk to the highway commissioner, fixing the 30th day of September, 1890, at 10 o’clock A. M., to view the premises and hear the appeal of said Henry Lamp from the determination of the commissioner. Like notice was served upon Henry Lamp, and proof of service of this notice was filed with the township board.

At the time of the meeting of the board affidavits were filed with the board showing that William Whitmer, a member of the township board before whom the appeal was to be heard, prior to the meeting of -the commissioner to lay out a highway,' approached certain resident freeholders of that township, and solicited them to sign the petition to lay out the highway, and represented that it was a necessity, and ought to be laid out. Two such affidavits were filed with the board.. An affidavit was also filed with the board in which it was shown that James C. Bishop, one of the members of said township board, was highway commissioner of that township in 1863, and a petition was presented to him to lay out and open such road during that year, upon which he expressed his opinion in favor of said road; and also that William Whitmer, a member of the board, was the owner of real estate a short distance north of the western terminus of said proposed highway, and interested personally and financially in laying out the same. A remonstrance was also presented to the board on that day signed by over 100 residents of that township, against the laying out or establishing of the highway on said proposed line. These affidavits and this remonstrance were laid before the township board, and objection made to William Whitmer and J. C. Bishop, two members of said board, as incompetent and not qualified to sit and try said cause of said, appeal, or to decide the necessity of laying out [244]*244said road, or hear and determine said cause on the evidence, for the reasons:

“1. That said parties are interested in laying out said highway.
“2. That said Bishop and Whitmer have already expressed their opinions in favor of the same before hearing any of the evidence or objections to the laying out of the same.”

A request was thereupon made to the board to remove said members from said board, at its then sitting, and to appoint others to fill their places, qualified to sit and hear and determine the case according to the statute.

It was also objected before said board that the affidavit of service of notice to lay out this highway, and of the meeting for that purpose, on the occupants and owners of land through which it was to be laid out, did not show that notices were properly served, and therefore the board had no jurisdiction of the cause on appeal.

The township board met according to the notice, and there were present J. C. Bishop, supervisor, Daniel Gillett and William Whitmer, justices of the peace, and A. C. Himebaugh, deputy-clerk.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 N.W. 572, 87 Mich. 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-township-board-mich-1891.