192 Ky. 700 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1921
Opinion of the Court by
— Affirming.
William Con Bell, a person of unsound mind, owned a tract of land in Mercer .county, Kentucky, containing in the neighborhood of three hundred acres, 12.9 'acres of which were within the corporate limits of Harrodsburg, a city of the fourth class. On the 9.th of December, 1920, the appellee, board of education of Harrodsburg, Kentucky, instituted this proceeding in the Mercer county court against Bell, the owner of the land, and his com
1. The right of eminent domain rests primarily with ' the sovereignty and may not be exercised except in furtherance and in aid of a public purpose. (Kentucky Constitution, section 13; 10 R. C, L., 11, 12 and 27, and 15
Prior to the enactment of chapter 14, Session Acts 1920, there was no authority or power to exercise the right of eminent domain vested in any of the public school authorities of the state, except in the various county-boards of education, upon which the authority was delegated by act of March 24,1908, now subsection 11 of section 4426a, vol. 2, Ky. Stats. Prior to the latter enactment the power to condemn land for school site purposes was vested in the district trustees of the various school districts in the county and which authority was conferred by a statute passed in 1893, and it now appears in vol. 2, 1915 edition, Kentucky Statutes, as section 4439. That statute limited the right of the trustees to condemn land by saying': “But they .shall not have the right to condemn any private property which is used by the owner as a residence, garden, orchard or burying ground. The quantity .of land thus condemned shall in no case exceed one acre. ’ ’
The 1908 act delegated to the county board of education the power “to condemn any real estate for school purposes in any district and may proceed to do so in the manner provided for by law for the condemnation of land for railroad purposes.” And in section 18 (now subsection 19 of section 4426a, Kentucky Statutes) all laws in conflict with that act were expressly repealed. Hence, in the case of Vincent v. Edmonspn County Board of Education, 169 Ky. 34, it was held that section 4439 was repealed by the 1908 act in so far as the selection and acquisition of school sites were concerned. Evidently - after the passage of the 1908 act the only authority pos
In 1916 the legislature enacted chapter 24, Session Acts for that year, 162, the title of which reads: “An act to repeal chapter 113 of the Kentucky Statutes, Carroll’s edition of 1915, being sections 4363 to 4535k, inclusive, except sections 4421a and 4421b and sections 4527 to 4535c inclusive, and re-enact the same chapter with the articles and .sections corrected, rearranged, simplified, and the repealed sections and parts of sections omitted, and fixing the time of year at which text book adoptions shall be made.” That act retained the management of the public schools in the county board of education as it had been since the passage of the act of 1908 and in section 97 thereof, subsection 11 of the 1908 act, was expressly reenacted and section 113 thereof was but a re-enactment of the old 4439 section, and wherein the right to condemn land was limited as in the latter section, but the authority to do so was given to the county board of education instead of to the school trustees. So that in the 1916 act we have one section giving the authority to the county board of education the right to condemn land for school purposes without limitation (in section 97), and one limiting that right (section 113). But whether the limitation, as prescribed in section 113 of that act, is now the law applicable to the acquisition of school sites for the common schools of the state we need not determine in this case for the reasons hereinafter stated.
Conceiving, apparently for the first time, the necessity for city boards of education and boards of trustees of graded common school districts to possess the right of eminent domain to enable them, when necessary, to condemn land required for school purposes, the legislature in 1920 enacted chapter 14, supra, and chapter 25, Session Acts 1920, 112, the one relating exclusively to public schools in cities of the fourth class and the other to graded common school districts governed by trustees. Subsection 3 of chapter 14 (the act relating to schools in cities of the fourth class) says:
“It (the board of education) .shall also have power, when unable to contract with the owner of any real estate necessary to the proper accomplishment of the purpose for which said board is created, to institute condemna*705 tion proceedings in accordance with the law governing railroad corporations operated or incorporated under the existing laws of this Commonwealth, under laws which may hereafter be enacted; and to have in such proceedings the same rights, powers, privileges and restrictions, as are now granted to or conferred upon such railroad corporations. 'Such board of education shall have all the powers of other school districts under the laws of this state, except as herein provided.”
Chapter 25, Acts 1920, delegated to the trustees of graded common school districts the same right of eminent domain as was delegated to boards of education of cities of the fourth class by subsec. 3 of chapter 14, except the quantity of land authorized to be condemned under chapter 25 was limited to ten acres. It is conceded by counsel for appellants that subsection 3 of chapter 14, 1920 Acts, confers the power of eminent domain upon appellee, board of education, but they insist that the last sentence in that section limits the right of the board to that which may be exercised for the benefit of the common school districts of the state in such cases, and that section 113 of the 1916 act limits the right of condemnation as to those districts to only one acre of land, and withholds the right to condemn any quantity whereon is located a residence, garden, orchard or burying ground. The language in subsection 3 which appellants’ counsel insists limits the right of the board, as indicated, says: “Such board of education shall have all the powers of other school districts under the laws of this state, except as herein provided. ’ ’ Whatever may' be the full meaning of that sentence y?e are thoroughly convinced that it was not the intention of the legislature in incorporating it in section 3 of the act referred to, to place any limitation upon the right of the board to condemn land in any of the respects contended for, nor was it intended thereby to limit the right of the board to the authority which other school districts possessed with reference to the condemnation of land. That the legislature realized that the quantity of land to be acquired by the board of education of cities of the fourth class should be limited only by a reasonable necessity is shown in .section 2, chapter 14, Acts 1920, relating to schools of fourth class cities, wherein it gave the board the right “to purchase and hold all property, real 'and personal, deemed by it necesary for the purposes of public education,” and “to build and construct improvements for such purposes and to hold or sell the
The last sentence of section 3 of the act (quoted above), so much relied on by counsel for appellants, is at the end of all the enumerated' powers of the board conferred by the act, and it was the evident intention, by the general language employed, to confer upon the board all other powers possessed by other school districts, “except as herein provided.” The word “herein” in the section is not confined to the section in which it is used, but to the entire act of which that section is a part, and in the very section where it is used the board was given the power to condemn without limitation, either as to quantity or character, except, as we have before stated, the quantity should be limited by a reasonable necessity.
We therefore conclude that whether the limitations, hereinbefore referred to, upon the right to condemn land for the' use of common school'districts is or is not the law at present, boards of education of cities of the fourth class are not circumscribed by those limitations; from which it follows that the circuit court did not err in overruling the motion to dismiss the proceeding. The evidence is amply sufficient to sustain the verdict of the jury in finding that the amount of land proposed to be condemned was reasonably necessary for the purposes of the board and it had the right to condemn it notwithstanding there existed a residence thereon. Ground (1) must, therefore, be denied.
2. The criticism of counsel under this ground, (2), is directed exclusively to instruction No. 2, upon the measure of damages given at the instance of appellee and which says:
“If you find for the plaintiff you will find for the defendant, William Con Bell, .such a sum as you may believe from the evidence is the fair and reasonable cash value of the tract of land taken, considering it in relation*707 to the entire tract of which the said strip is a part, and also such other direct damage, if any, as yon may believe from the evidence will directly result to the remainder of the tract by reason of the situation in which it is placed by reason of taking said tract, and such additional fencing or other improvements, if any, as may be necessary for the reasonable enjoyment of the remaining tract by reason of the taking of said tract, but your finding under this instruction should not exceed in all the amount which you- may believe from the evidence' is the difference between the market value of the entire tract of land immediately before and the market value of the remainder after the taking of said tract containing 13% (12.9) acres, excluding from both estimates any enhancement of the value of the land by reason of the prudent building or operation of the proposed school.”
The statute (section 3 of chapter 14,1920 Acts, supra) expressly directs that the proceedings shall be “in accordance with the law governing railroad corporations operated or incorporated under the existing laws of this Commonwealth . . . and (the board) to have in such proceedings the same rights, powers, privileges and re-' strictions, as are now granted to or conferred upon such railroad corporations.” Necessarily, this language means that the proceedings by the board to condemn land for school purposes must be conducted in all respects as are similar proceedings instituted by railroad companies.
The complained of instruction is in the main an exact copy of one .given in section 249, page 284, in Hobson on Instruction to Juries, and it is taken from an approved instruction in the case of Big Sandy Railroad Co. v. Dils, 120 Ky. 563. The same instruction, in substance, was approved in the cases of Broadway Coal Mining Co. v. Smith, 136 Ky. 725; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Hall, 143 Ky. 497; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Ingram, 12 Ky. L. R. 456; Elizabethtown and Paducah Railroad Co. v. Helm’s Heirs, 8 Bush, 681, and other cases in notes to section 249 of the work last referred to. All of the cases from this court to which our attention has been directed, or which we have been able to find, limit the amount of direct damagés recoverable in like cases to such an amount as represents “the difference between the actual value of the entire tract immediately before, and the actual value of the remainder immediately after” the taking of the quantity condemned, excluding from both estimates any enhance
3. The evidence, as is usual in such cases, was widely contradictory. Some of the most extreme witnesses testifying for appellants fixed the value of the quantity of land taken at from $35,000.00 to $40,000.00, and the damage to the remainder of the tract at from $8,000.00 to $10,000.00, but some of those same witnesses say that the entire tract was reasonably worth on the market from $65.00 to $75.00 per acre. It is.difficult to conceive how the whole tract of land which is worth, according to the highest price given by these witnesses, only about $21,000.00, could be damaged from $35,000.00 to $45,000.00 by taking only about thirteen acres of it, leaving untouched from 275 to 287 acres. The proposition to our mind is preposterous, and the testimony given by such witnesses must have been superinduced by motives clearly affecting it. Other witnesses for appellants fix the total amount of damages higher than the verdict of the jury, but a number of witnesses testified for the board of education and they fixed the damages, some of them lower than the verdict, and some of them at the same amount of, or slightly above it. It has often been held by this court that when the testimony was thus contradictory it was the peculiar province of the jury to reconcile the contradictions and arrive at a true verdict in the light of all the facts and circumstances. It is only where the verdict at first blush strikes the mind of the court as having been influenced by passion or prejudice, or some other motive on' the part of the jury which caused its verdict to shock the conscience of the court, that it will be set aside as flagrantly against the evidence. We do not regard the testimony in this case as of such a nature as to authorize us to set aside the verdict on this ground, and it, like the other two grounds considered, must likewise be denied.
Wherefore, there appearing no error prejudicial to the substantial rights of appellants, the judgment is affirmed.