Court Opinion

ID: 6996616
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 03:34:26.12016+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:09:47.803077
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Lacey delivered the opinion oe the Court. This was a petition for a temporary writ of mandamus, at the relation of William Watts, asking that appellants be compelled to pay certain damages' assessed for opening a highway, and to open the highway named in the petition, and to levy a tax for the payment of the damages. A jury was waived and the cause was tried by the court, and stipulation of the parties that it should be tried as though a full answer was filed, and that the answer should be considered as a return to the writ. The answer admits the facts set up in the writ, except those denied by stipulation, and the questions submitted to the court on the trial were such as arise from the controverted facts, and the legal questions therein specified. The court heard the case on the points submitted and ordered a peremptory writ of mandamus. The road in question fan on township line between two different townships, to wit, Mt. Morris and Pine Creek. The supervisors, to whom the cause had been appealed from an order of the commissioners of highways refusing to lay out the road, made an order at Polo, outside the towns, August 30, 1890, to lay out the road. On the 3d day of September, 1890, a copy of this order was filed with the town clerk of Pine Creek, and in March, 1893, with the town clerk of Mt. Morris. A demand was made on the commissioners of highways to lay out the road preliminary to the filing of the petition herein, returnable to the December term, 1893, of the Circuit Court. It is insisted that the order of the supervisors laying out the road was void, because it was done outside the towns in which the road was to be laid; that there was not a sufficient demand; that the road was not opened within two years after it was laid out. The commissioners claim that the filing the copy of the order laying out the road with one town clerk only, was sufficient to complete the laying out the road; and that the statute of limitations has run against its opening; and if that did not operate to complete the laying out of the road, a delay of nearly three years in filing a copy of the order of the supervisors laying it out, with the town clerk of Mt. Morris, was unreasonable delay, and therefore the supervisors lost jurisdiction of it. The above are the questions to be considered by this court. ' Section 30 of chapter 121 of Hurd’s Revised Statutes of 1893, provides that “ all public roads laid out as herein provided, shall be opened within two years of the time of laying out the same; if not opened within the time aforesaid, the same shall be deemed to be vacated.” It will appear from the reading of the above statute, that if the road was laid out at the time a copy of the final order laying out the same was filed with the town clerk of Pine Creek township, then the statute had run against it; for more than two years had elapsed between that time and the filing of the petition herein. We are of the opinion, however, that in cases of this kind, where the road is laid out by the joint act of the commissioners of both towns, or of the supervisors on appeal, and in view of the provisions of the statute requiring a copy of the final order to be filed with the town clerk of each township, that the laying out of the road is not completed until the filing of the final order in each township. It then remains to be considered whether a delay of three years in filing the final order of laying out the road with the town clerk of Mt. Morris, was a sufficient compliance with the statute. The statute requires that before a public road on a town line is legally laid out, so as to make it the duty of the commissioners to open it, and before they can be compelled to do so by mandamus, or otherwise, a copy of the final order shall be filed with the town clerk of each town, but does not fix the time in which it shall be done. Wright v. The Commissioners of Highways, 145 Ill. 48. Where the road is to be laid out wholly in one town, the statute requires the final order to be filed with the town clerk within five days from its execution, but not so in cases like the one at bar. It is further decided in the case above cited of Wright v. The Commissioners, if the filing is done within a reasonable time, that will be regarded as a compliance with the statute. The main question to be decided here is, whether the delay mentioned in filing the final order with the town clerk of Mt. Morris was unreasonable. It is claimed by appellee that the last mentioned point is not one of the questions presented by the agreement of the parties. We think, however, that the agreement, properly understood, raised that question. The third point of law submitted was, “ did the failure of the supervisors to file in the office of the town clerk of Mt. Morris, within five days after it was made, operate in law as an annulment of the order laying out of the said road.” While it is not precisely submitted whether the filing of the order with the town clerk of Mt. Morris was within a reasonable time, it was, we think, the intention to submit to the court the real question, whether it was so filed; and not to restrict the court to the question whether five days was within a reasonable time. We think this would be too narrow a construction of the agreement. There is no doubt that the filing of a final order laying out a road, is a condition precedent to its being legally laid out. Poole et al. v. Breese, 114 Ill. 594. In Commissioners of Highways v. Barry, 66 Ill. 499, the Supreme Court held that the lapse of one year and two months from the time of posting the petition for the road until the filing of the final order laying out the same was unreasonable delay, even though there was no specific time required by statute in Avhich to file the order. As will be seen by reference to the statute requiring a road to be opened, it must be done Avithin tAvo years from the time it is laid out. It seems to be the policy of the law that when a road is laid out it must be opened within a short time, and also by the decision in the Barry case, supra, that after the starting of the proceedings to lay out a road, it must be completed within, at least, one year and two months, i. e., within a reasonable time. We think then, in view of all the analogies of the law, and the evident intention of the legislature not to alloAV the laying out of a road to be suspended indefinite^ after proceedings are started, that, as in this case, a delay of nearly three years in filing the copy of the final order with the town clerk of Mt. Morris, Avas fatal to the legality of the road. It is admitted that there Aims no toAvn clerk in Mt. Morris from the date of the order of establishing the road, till shortly before the filing the copy of the final order with the toAvn clerk of said toivn March 18, 1893. The people have a legal remedy and poAver to complete the filling of vacancies in the toAvn clerk’s office Avhen one exists, and Ave know of no rule of laAV to excuse the laying out of a road for so long a period of time, on the mere excuse there was no toAvn clerk with whom to file their final order. In the ArieAV Ave take of the case, it is not necessary to pass on the other questions in the case presented by counsel for appellant. The judgment of the Circuit Court, is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded. Judge Cabtavkight took no partin the decision.