Burrows v. County Court of Carter County

Citation308 S.W.2d 299
Decision Date02 December 1957
Docket NumberNo. 7638,7638
PartiesCarl BURROWS et al., Remonstrators-Appellants, v. COUNTY COURT OF CARTER COUNTY, Missouri, S. W. Protsman et al., Petitioners-Respondents.
CourtCourt of Appeal of Missouri (US)

Wangelin & Friedewald, Poplar Bluff, for remonstrators-appellants.

J. Ben Searcy, Eminence, Hogan & Hogan, West Plains, of counsel, for petitioners-respondents.

STONE, Presiding Judge.

This is an appeal by forty-seven remonstrators from the judgment of the circuit court affirming an order of the County Court of Carter County dated August 6, 1956, purporting to vacate a short segment of a county road about 15 miles southwest of Van Buren, because such vacated segment 'is useless, and the repairing of the same an unreasonable burden upon the district through which it runs and upon Carter County.' See Section 228.110(1). (All statutory references herein are to RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S.) Nineteen petitioners for vacation are the real parties respondent. Although the 'County Court of Carter County' is named as a respondent, the county as such is not a party to the action. Under these circumstances, we have appellate jurisdiction. State ex rel. Town of Olivette v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co., Mo., 273 S.W.2d 286, 289(6).

In a prior proceeding to vacate the same segment of road, the County Court of Carter County entered an order of vacation dated February 6, 1956; but, on appeal, the circuit court properly declared that said order was void for failure to comply with the mandatory requirement of Section 228.070 (re-enacted Laws of 1953, p. 667) that the proposed vacation be 'examined and approved by the county highway engineer.' Morris v. Karr, 342 Mo. 179, 114 S.W.2d 962, 963; Tummons v. Stokes, Mo.App., 274 S.W. 528, 529(2), certiorari quashed State ex rel. Tummons v. Cox, 313 Mo. 672, 680, 282 S.W. 694, 695-696(5). Although the present proceeding to vacate was instituted on June 21, 1956, less than one year after entry of the first order of vacation on February 6, 1956, we here assume (without, however, so determining) that, as petitioners-respondents insist, the second petition to vacate was not within the prohibition of Section 228.130 because the county court had no jurisdiction to enter the first order of vacation and such order 'was wholly void.'

Since a county court is now an administrative body [Kansas City v. Rooney (banc), 363 Mo. 902, 903, 254 S.W.2d 626, 627] and since Section 228.120(2) expressly provides that any order vacating a public road 'shall be subject to judicial review to the same extent and in the manner prescribed by chapter 536' dealing with 'Administrative Procedure and Review,' the scope of judicial review in the instant case is that provided by Section 22, Article V, Mo.Const. of 1945, as implemented by Section 536.140 (amended Laws of 1953, p. 680). In re Weston Benefit Assessment Special Road Dist. of Platte Co., Mo.App., 294 S.W.2d 353, 356; State ex rel. Weston, etc., v. Maughmer, Mo.App., 275 S.W.2d 385. Although we may not substitute our own judgment on the evidence for that of the county court, we are authorized to determine whether that body reasonably could have made its findings and reached its result upon consideration of all of the evidence before it, and to set aside the order of vacation if we find it to be clearly contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence. Kansas City v. Rooney, supra, 363 Mo. loc. cit. 904, 254 S.W.2d loc. cit. 628; State ex rel. Bond v. Simmons, Mo.App., 299 S.W.2d 540, 542(3), and cases there collected. Remonstrators' primary complaints being that the order of vacation 'is unsupported by competent and substantial evidence upon the whole record' and 'is arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable' [Section 536.140(2), as amended Laws of 1953, p. 680], a review of the evidence presented to the county court becomes necessary.

To facilitate an understanding of the factual situation, we reproduce marginally 1 a rough sketch to which frequent references will be made. The segment of road vacated by order of the county court (hereinafter referred to as the vacated segment) lies between points E and F on the sketch, is about .35 mile in length, and terminates on the south at the Carter County-Ripley County line. This vacated segment constitutes a relatively minor portion of a county road (hereinafter referred to as the valley road), which is about 2.25 miles in length, runs in a general northwesterly-southeasterly direction roughly parallel with and north of Big Barren Creek, and extends (between points A and B on the sketch) from farm-to-market Route 'C' to a 'CCC' forestry service road. With the vacated segment pinched out, the valley road would be cut into two cul-de-sacs or dead-end segments, with the northwesterly cul-de-sac (between points A and E on the sketch) about 1.3 miles in length and the southeasterly cul-de-sac (between points F and B) about .6 mile in length. The Big Barren church, 'an organized church meeting * regularly,' and a cemetery are near the lower or southeasterly end of the valley road (at point B on the sketch). If the valley road were closed to through traffic, the only course for vehicular travel between points A and B on the sketch (hereinafter referred to as the ridge road) would be over Route 'C' between points A and D and over the 'CCC' road between points D and B an aggregate distance of 4.2 miles or about 1.95 miles farther than the 2.25 miles between points A and B over the valley road.

NOTE: OPINION CONTAINS TABLE OR OTHER DATA THAT IS NOT VIEWABLE

The only witnesses testifying on the merits in support of the proposed vacation were three petitioners, S. W. Protsman, M. L. Protsman and Paul Heavin, who own the tracts through which the vacated segment runs. On direct examination, S. W. Protsman testified that he sought vacation because 'it is a wore out road and never much travel, not much travel on it, and it is a detriment to our farms and our property, and every time (Big Barren) creek gets up to amount to anything, it washes out all the fences.' On cross-examination, the same witness said that the water 'takes the fence out all the way down that road when it gets up big,' later disclosed that the fence was washed out 'six or seven years ago the last time,' and finally complained that 'I don't want to be bothered with the fence washing out, and I want my water there, and we got water there, if we could get to it.' Although this witness asserted that the vacated segment 'cannot be repaired to make a good road out of it with any reasonable amount of money,' he volunteered that the valley road 'has been there for forty odd years that I know of, and I never have saw anybody do a lick of work on it, on this road--I know there has never been a dollar spent on it by anybody'; and, he readily conceded that 'people have been traveling it and are still traveling it.'

M. L. Protsman, a son of S. W. Protsman, similarly testified that the valley road has 'been there a long time'--'twenty-five years I guess, maybe longer,' and that no money had been spent on the road. When asked whether he thought that the valley road was 'useless,' his illuminating answer was, 'I wouldn't say it is useless at the present time; there is times of the year that it is impassable; you can get up and down there now, and they travel it some.' Paul Heavin frankly stated his personal interest in the proposed vacation because 'it will save me a lot of fence when the creek gets up; it will also give me the use of some land that I have there that I can't use as it is.'

The county court also had before it a written report by Vernon Wilkins, as 'Carter County Highway Engineer.' The precise date of Wilkins' purported appointment and qualification is not clear. Both his 'Oath of Office' and his 'Official Bond' show that he was appointed on June 4, 1956, and the bond further recites that Wilkins 'has been duly commissioned' and bears written approval 'by the Carter County Court this 4th day of June, 1956,' the day on which the appeal from the first order of vacation (declared void for failure to comply with the statutory requirement of examination and approval by the county highway engineer) was argued and submitted in the circuit court. But, the bond approved on June 4, 1956, was dated June 5, 1956, and the oath reciting Wilkins' appointment on June 4, 1956, was acknowledged before the county clerk on June 5, 1956. To compound the confusion, the county clerk read a record entry dated July 2, 1956, that 'the (county) court appoints Vernon Wilkins as County Engineer to inspect a road as petitioned to be vacated by S. W. Protsman, L. M. Protsman and Paul Heavin,' and then testified that Wilkins had filed his bond 'on the day he made this inspection.'

However, petitioners' evidence definitely established that Wilkins lives in, and is county surveyor of, Shannon County; that, on a date not fixed in the record, petitioner S. W. Protsman, accompanied by the presiding judge of the County Court of Carter County, 'went up to Shannon County to get Mr. Wilkins'; that, regardless of the date of its filing, Wilkins' bond was signed by petitioners, S. W. Protsman and M. L. Protsman, as securities; and that, when Wilkins made 'his inspection,' Protsman 'took him over the road' and 'paid him the mileage.' When asked whether the presiding judge 'came along' on that trip, Protsman's memory failed him. Incubated in these strange and curious circumstances, Wilkins' report contained the enigmatic statement that 'approximately one mile of (the...

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    ...case is that provided by Article V, Section 22, Const. of 1945, as implemented by Section 536.140. Cf. Burrows v. County Court of Carter County, Mo.App., 308 S.W.2d 299, 301. Although the circuit court was in the first instance, and this court is on appeal, authorized to determine whether, ......
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