
    MERCER v. M’WILLIAMS AND BETHEL.
    Constitution — private property taken for public use — sovereign attribute — supervisors of roads? and their assistants.
    Private property may be taken for public use, when provision for the assessment and payment of damages is made, whether the owner fs actually paid or not.
    If the right to appropriate private property to the public use depended upon the movement of the owner it would be useless, as, if he chose to sell his property, he could do so without the-exercise of the sovereign power against him.
    A supervisor may open an established road, before the damages are assessed and paid to the owner of the land, and may justif}7-pulling down fences to open the road.
    A supervisor may employ others to¡ work under him m opening such road, and they will be protected by his authority, whether resident in his road district or not*
    Trespass, quare clausum ffegjt. Pleas — 1. Severally for each defendant, not guilty. 2. As to M’Williams, that he was a supervisor of roads, and, as such did the act complained of as a trespass. On this issue was joined. 3. As to Bethel, that he acted under the orders of the supervisor, according to law. Replication. That Bethel did not do the acts under the direction of the supervisor of the district where he resides. Issue was taken on that.
    The cause was submitted to the court upon the following agreed state of facts: M’Williams opened the fences of the plaintiff along the roads laid out under the act of February, 1828, and February, 1830, according to the road law of February, 1824. He was a supervisor, and laid the fences down under the order of the trustees, to open all roads. Mercer applied to the commissioners for damages, and had them assessed at $225, which the commissioners refused to allow, because they thought the amount unjust to the county. An appeal was taken to the C'ourt of Common Pleas, and the order of the commissioners confirmed. No order was issued for the money, and no order was issued by the commissioners for^ening the roads. Bethel did not reside in MWilliams’' districtingípts present an^„ assisted in pulling down the feimeSj^^J^^SpaiStiff Ijas a right’Ao ■ recover, the damages shall be six cents, &c.
    
      Genin, for the plaintiff,
    insisted that the assessment of damages is an essential pre-requisite to the road, and the refusal to pay, is the destruction of the road. 29 O. L. 361.
    
      Nichols and Wier, contra.
   Wright, J.

The question most pressed upon the court, is the supposed constitutional inhibition to taking private property for public use, without compensation in money be first made. Con. Art. 8, sec. 4. /'This question has been repeatedly before this court, and the courts of other states, and it has been uniformly held, that the state, by virtue of its transcendental or sovereign power, its eminent domain, may take the private property of one citizen for the1 good of the whole. The constitution limits the exercise of this power, to cases where a compensation in money is made. In practice, this clause has been deemed complied with, where the legislature has provided by law, for the assessment and payment of damages, if they^ are claimed. 4 O. R. 288; 5 O. R. 118; 2 Kent C. 274. Judge Kent has indeed carried the doctrine much farther; but we have now no occasion for going beyond former decisions. Unless the provision for the assessment and payment of damages was sufficient, the public could never get the use of private property for great public works, without the owner chose first to move to get his damages paid. If left to his own will, the provision would become useless; because if he chose to sell he could do so, and there would be no need of sovereign interference to appropriate the property. Public works should not be so subject to the will of an individual. The party in this case has sought his damages, and the refusal to pay does not affect the question. The remedy of the party is for the damages — the road is complete without payment. The supervisor is justified. So is Bethel who assisted, whether in his own district or not. The supervisor may employ hands out of his district.

Judgment for the defendant.  