Court Opinion

ID: 8190338
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:13:14.482201+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:35.274087
License: Public Domain

KeRWIit, J.
The first point made hy appellant is that the proceedings on the first petition filed May 11, 1909, were valid, and that the failure of the defendants to lay out a highway and award damages under such proceedings was a denial of the application under secs. 1269 and 1283, Stats. (1898), and therefore the supervisors had no right to act upon another petition within the year. If this point he well taken the judgment below must he reversed and no other question need he treated.
Sec. 1267, Stats. (1898), provides that on application made to the supervisors to lay out a highway they shall make out a notice fixing a time and place at which they will meet and decide upon the application, and the applicants shall, at least five days previous to such time, cause such notice to be given to all the occupants of land through which such highway may pass. The statute further provides that the notice shall specify as near as practicable the highway proposed to he laid out and the several tracts of land through which the same may pass.
The principal attack of the respondents is upon the petition and notice in the first proceeding, and it is insisted that they are not in compliance with the statutes and hence conferred no authority upon the supervisors to make the order laying out the highway, because it is argued that the tracts of land through which the proposed highway was to pass were not sufficiently described under secs. 1265 and 1267.
The petition and notice under the above sections described *122the highway as “starting at a point in the highway between section eight (8) and seventeen (II) where the quarter-section line of said section intersects said highway, due north on the east side of-the quarter-section line in section eight (8) for a distance of about seventy (70) rods to a point where said quarter-section line intersects the Whitewater and Waukesha Territorial Road.”
This we think was a sufficient description of the line of the highway and no one of ordinary intelligence could be misled by it. And it was a sufficient description of the tracts of land through which the described highway was to pass, under repeated decisions of this court. State ex rel. Iola v. Nelson, 57 Wis. 147, 15 N. W. 14; Jackson v. Rankin, 67 Wis. 285, 30 N. W. 301; State ex rel. Milwaukee, L. S. & W. R. Co. v. O’Connor, 78 Wis. 282, 47 N. W. 433; State ex rel. Gottschalk v. Miller, 136 Wis. 344, 117 N. W. 809.
The initial point of the highway was definitely fixed, and the course “due north” on the east side of the quarter-section line made the description and location sufficiently clear as on the east side of the line and described the land as lying east and abutting on the section line.
The order laying out the highway described it as a highway three rods wide along the east side of the quarter-section line described and abutting thereon. So the land over which the highway passed was sufficiently described both in the notice and order, under the decisions of this court heretofore cited. No other objection is made to the petition, notice, or order except as to the sufficiency of the description of the tracts of land through which the same may pass.
It is claimed, however, that the supervisors had no jurisdiction to make the order for want of notice; that no notice' had been served upon the plaintiff. The complaint contains a copy of the order. The order recites that notice had been duly given, and sec. 1298, Stats. (1898), makes the order presumptive evidence of the facts therein stated. The an*123swer does not deny tbe facts recited in tbe order respecting notice. Moreover there is no proof tbat there was no service of tbe notice on tbe plaintiff. Tbe only evidence of nonserv-ice is tbat one Grambling did not serve on plaintiff. This was not sufficient to overcome tbe presumption raised by tbe recitals in tbe order. Eor angbt tbat appears there may have been service by some one other than Grambling. We therefore conclude tbat tbe proceedings under tbe first application resulting in tbe order laying out tbe highway were valid.
But no award of damages was made or filed under tbe first proceeding as required by sec. 1269, which provides tbat unless such award be filed as provided tbe supervisors shall be deemed to have decided against tbe application.
Sec. 1283, Stats. (1898), provides tbat tbe determination of tbe board of supervisors in refusing to lay out any highway shall be final for tbe term of one year after tbe making of such determination, unless reversed on appeal; and tbat no application for laying out any such highway shall be again acted upon by tbe supervisors within said term of one year. So it follows tbat, tbe proceedings upon tbe first application being valid and tbe defendants having failed to award damages within tbe time allowed by law, tbe supervisors bad no power to entertain tbe second application, and therefore proceedings thereunder are null and void.
Tbe claim tbat defendants withdrew tbe papers in tbe first proceeding and declared it null and void cannot avail them. Their status was fixed when tbe order was made, and failure to award damages as provided in sec. 1269, Stats. (1898), amounted to a decision against tbe application. To allow defendants, after tbe application bad been denied by operation of tbe statute, to proceed again within a year contrary to sec. 1283 would be to suffer them to defeat tbe purpose of tbe statute.
By. the Gowrt. — Tbe judgment of tbe court below is reversed, and cause remanded with directions to enter judgment as prayed for in tbe complaint.