Court Opinion

ID: 5437730
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 17:56:54.678904+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:31:54.056650
License: Public Domain

By the Court, Belcher, J.:
On the 6th of July, 1870, the Board of Supervisors made an order, adopting the report of the Road Viewers, and awarding damages to the plaintiff in the following words: “ Damages to the amount of two hundred and sixty-three dollars and twenty cents are hereby awarded to Martin Murphy, payable from the Current Expense Eund of .said county.”
Two days thereafter this action was commenced to restrain the defendant, as Roadmaster, from proceeding to ojien the proposed road across the land of the plaintiff.
Section nine of the Act concerning roads and highways in Santa Clara County (Stats. 1865-6, p. 553), is as follows: “ Upon the report of the Road Viewers being filed as above provided for, the Board of Supervisors shall order the amount of damages sustained by each and every person owning or claiming said lands, to be set apart in the treasury, to be paid to the proper owner or claimant. * * * From the time of setting-apart of the amount as above provided, said lauds shall be deemed to be taken up for public use.”
The order awarding damages to the plaintiff was not a setting apart for him in the treasury of the amount of money named.- It does not appear whether there was money in the Fund on which the order was made or not; but if there was, notwithstanding this order, the whole amount might have been immediately drawn out by other orders. At most the order to the plaintiff only entitled him to a warrant upon the Current Expense Fund, which, upon presentation, would be paid if there was at the time money in the Fund to pay it. This was not a compliance with either the letter *53or spirit of the law, and the plaintiff’s land was not thereafter “ deemed to be taken for public use.”
Nor was the tender made by the defendant to the plaintiff in September of the amount awarded as damages of any avail. No authority is found in the statute for such a tender. If the public needed the plaintiff’s land for a road there was a plain, speedy, and easy method’ provided by which it might be taken. That method, however, could not be departed from and a new one substituted in its place.
"Until all the provisions of the statute were strictly complied with the defendant had no right to open the proposed road over the land of the plaintiff.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.