274 Mo. 140 | Mo. | 1918
This is a proceeding in the circuit court for Clay County for the assessment of benefits accruing to property situated in the Birmingham Drainage District in that county and to assess damages to property to be taken or injuriously affected in the construction of its works.
The proceeding for incorporation of the district was instituted September 22, 1913,' under the provisions of the act of the General Assembly approved March 24, 1913, pertaining to the “Organization of Drainage Districts by Circuit Courts” (Laws 1913, p. 232), by the filing of the articles of association and giving the notice required by the act. The articles were signed by eighteen persons and corporations owning more than one-half in acreage of the 5390 acres of land in the proposed district. A formal decree of incorporation was entered by the court, and was brought to this court by appeal, where it was affirmed. [In Re Birmingham Drainage District, 266 Mo. 60.]
Supervisors were thereupon elected and such proceedings taken that benefits and damages were assessed, the former amounting to $572,376.27 and the latter to $25,341.20. The estimated cost of the work, including the damages, was $350,657, and the court entered its decree accordingly.
The Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company, Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company, and the Wabash Railway Company, appealed from the judgment to this court on April 1, 1916. In March, 1917, the appeal was, by leave of the court, dismissed,
It is sufficiently accurate for the purpose of this statement to say that more than one hundred landowners against whose property benefits, were assessed, failed to file exceptions to the report of the commissioners, and were not notified of the application for or issue of this writ of error, and have made no appearance here.
Upon the return of the writ the Birmingham Drainage District, appearing for that purpose only, filed its motion to quash it on the ground that .error does not lie in a case of this character. This motion was by the court taken with the case and is now up for1 consideration.
The benefits assessed against the property of the three railway companies respectively, as modified by the court, were as follows: The Chicago, Burlington & Quincy, $18,000; Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paúl, $7000'; Wabash, $71,000. The decree states that in arriving at those amounts the court took into consideration, and deducted from the actual gross benefit found, the estimated cost necessary to be incurred by each railway company in conforming its tracks to the works of the district; which amounted, as there was evidence tending to show, in the case of the Wabash, to $42,000; the C. Bi & Q., $25,000; and the C., M. & St. Paul, $17,000. The damages awarded by the jury to each railway company were confined to land actually taken for or damaged by the work, and amounted to $250 each. The court refused the request of the companies to submit the question of benefits to a jury.
The plaintiffs in error, in their brief, state the issues as follows:
“The principal errors complained of, stated in a broad general way, are:
“The court refused to submit the question of benefits accruing to the corporate defendants, as well as the damages which would be caused to them, to a jury.
*149 “The court’s assessment of benefits ■ is grossly ■excessive under the evidence as well as under the law —that is, the assessment of benefits made by the court is not sustained by any evidence in the case, unless measured by the rule laid down by the statutes, that the benefits shall be assessed at the ‘increased, physical efficiency and decreased cost of maintenance.’ That if such statutory rule is so construed as to justify the result arrived at by the court, then the statute itself would be void as a taking of property without due process of law, and a denial of equal protection of the law. The claim, as to this, is that the 'statute is void for these reasons, even when correctly construed, but that construed and applied as the court has applied it in this case, as shown both by results and declarations of law, then the statute is clearly and unquestionably subject to the foregoing objections.”
I. In the gateway which leads to the merits of this case stands the motion to quash the writ of error which is responsible for its presence in this court. That the question so presented is not without difficulty under our Constitution and statutes in their application to this proceeding is evident upon the most casual examination. That this difficulty was fully appreciated by the plaintiffs in error, and that they dismisses the appeal upon which the matter was pending in this court and substituted this writ for the purpose of giving us a jurisdiction which we did not have and could not exercise by virtue of the appeal, is frankly conceded in their printed argument upon this motion. They refer to our decision in In re Mississippi and Fox River Drainage District; Buschling v. Ackley, 270 Mo. 157, as holding that an appeal allowed in a proceeding under the Act of 1913 brought up two questions only: “First, whether just compensation has been allowed for property appropriated; and, second, whether proper damages have been allowed for property prej-udicially affected by the improvement.” They de
II. Although article three of the State Constitution, while distributing the powers of the State Government into three distinct departments- — the legislative, executive and judicial — forbids any person or collection of persons charged with the exercise of pow-erg properly belonging to one of -those de- , , , . ° , partments to exercise any power properly belonging to either of the others, we have held (State ex rel. v. Higgins, 125 Mo. 864, 368) that . duties which are not judicial may be performed by judicial officers unless they are clearly such as are confined by the Constitution itself to the executive or legislative department. This literal and -altogether reasonable construction is founded in the necessities inherent in all governments. While the power to indicate what the laws shall be is purely legislative, the power to authoritatively determine what they are is judicial, and these are frequently so interlocked as to suggest the assistance of the judiciary in giving practical effect to a legislative enactment. The case before
That these districts are public corporations which may only be constituted by legislative authority exercised through an enactment of the General Assembly and put into effect either directly or by appropriate agencies designated by legislative authority, has been too often held by this court to be open to argument. [Egyptian Levee Co. v. Hardin, 27 Mo. 495; Columbia Bottom Levee Co. v. Meier, 39 Mo. 53; Morrison v. Morey, 146 Mo. 543; State ex rel. v. Drainage District, 192 Mo. 517; Mound City Land & Stock Co. v. Miller, 170 Mo. 240; State ex rel. v. Taylor, 224 Mo. 393; Squaw Creek Drainage District v. Turney, 235 Mo. 80; Little River Drainage District v. Railroad, 236 Mo. 94; Houck v. Drainage District, 248 Mo. 373 ; State ex rel. v. Foard, 268 Mo. 300.] And these drainage districts, when so formed, exercise the granted powers within their territorial jurisdiction as fully, and by the same authority, as municipal corporations of the State exercise the powers vested by their charters. [Houck v. Little River Drainage District, supra; Same case, 239 U. S. 254, 262.] Among other powers they may exercise that of taxation, and this power, so far as it may be expressly granted for the purposes of their incorporation, is only limited by the power of the Legislature which grants it.
All these things were evidently in the mind of the Legislature in the preparation of this law. Its initial purpose was evidently to provide an agency with ample facilities for the conduct of the necessary inquiry, including the legal knowledge and judicial discrimination requisite to a clear understanding of the legislative purpose, and to provide ample notice to all persons who might be affected by the result of the proceeding. For this duty it selected the circuit courts of those counties in which the property to be assessed or condemned or any part thereof should he situated. We see no reason to find fault with this selection. That tribunal was necessarily the one in which'proceedings must be had for the appropriation of lands and assessment of damages on account of the property to he taken or injuriously affected in the execution of the plans of the corporation. The payment of these damages was one of the purposes for which benefits must be assessed, and the amount of which was inseparably interwoven
It was not only natural, but it seems to us to- have been wise and prudent that the Legislature should, in the interest of facilitating its work, have divided those proceedings which were purely legislative in their nature from those that were constitutionally beyond its control and required judicial action for their validity, and this is exactly what it did. In determining whether or not the order of incorporation should be made the court was required to proceed “in a summary manner;” that is to say, forthwith and without regard to the established course of legal proceeding, disregarding everything h:ut the sufficiency and truth of the articles of association before it, and, should it find that the district should be incorporated, enter its finding and decree accordingly. The district then organized itself hy the election of supervisors, their organization and appointment of officers for the preparation of the plan of reclamation and securing the appointment by the court of commissioners to appraise the land required for rights of way, holding! basins and other drainage works, and to assess benefits and damages accruing to all lands in the district hy reason of the execution of the plan. [Sec. 14.] The same section provides that the public highway, railroad and other rights of way, roadways, railroads and other property, shall he assessed according to the increased efficiency and decreased maintenance cost of roadways hy reason of the protection to he derived from the proposed works and improvements. Upon the coming in of this- report the clerk of the circuit court is required to give public notice of that fact and “the drainage district or any owner of land or other property in said district” might then file exceptions to the report “or to any assessment for either benefits or damages,” and the circuit court is required to hear and determine the same
It will be seen that the act in question distinctly divides the duties of the court into two separate parts. The first of these is the examination of the report of the commissioners in the light of all objections made thereto, for the purpose of ascertaining the practicability of the scheme of reclama^ tion. This depended entirely upon whether or not it would pay in benefits for its own cost; otherwise, it would have no function either in justice or reason and the entire plan of paying for the benefits it might confer from the sum of such benefits would fail, because they were not worth the price. This made the ascertainment of the expected benefits the primary subject of the inquiry. The next was the ascertainment of the cost of the work which must be paid for out of this fund, including the amount which would have to be paid as damages for lands taken and injuriously affected. This also must, to facilitate the public improvement, be ascertained in a summary manner. All these matters, excepting the assessment of damages, were legislative in
We fail to see any constitutional or other reason why the intention of the Legislature, evident upon the face of this act, to confine our fight of review in these cases to the assessment of damages upon, appeal1 takén within the time provided by statute, should not he respected. The right of review in any case is purely statutory and may, in cases coming within the purview of those provisions of the code authorizing appeals and writs of error, be made available in either mode. The right to enact these statutes includes the right to, repeal or modify them or limit their application in any manner not inconsistent with some provision of the Constitution limiting the legislative power in that re
III. This proceeding was, in substance, provided for the purpose of forming and capitalizing a public corporation for a public purpose. While private corpora-lions are capitalized by voluntary contribution of funds voluntarily contributed and transferred to ^ eorporation to be owned and managed by it for the use in the prosecution of the private enterprise, the fund in this case was to be raised by assessment of “benefits” against the unwilling as well as the wiling, and the principal object of the proceeding in the circuit court was to fix the amount which each person having the statutory interest must contribute to the funds for furtherance of that interest in the enterprise. All persons and corporations subject to this forced contribution were, by the terms of the act, entitled to notice of the proceeding by which they were to be bound. The judgment to be rendered was an entirety, fixing the amount of the enforced contribution on each and could not be extinguished or modified as to one without affecting the interests of all. It might dissolve the corporation by leaving it without funds for the prosecution of the -enterprise, or it might lessen the amount to be contributed by some at the expense of all the others. The corporation itself occupied, to a great extent, the position of a by-stander waiting the result of a contest among the property-holders of the district as to how much each should be held liable to contribute in the common cause, and prepared to administer the fund should it be raised. If, after the final judgment of the. circuit court which settled this controversy,
These parties were all here upon the three appeals which were dismissed to make way for this writ. “When these appeals were taken at the term during which the case was tried, they came here upon the same notice which brought them into the circuit court for the purpose of that inquiry. With the dismissal of the appeals their duty of attendance ceased. If a writ of error should still lie under the provisions of the general code they might come back as plaintiffs in error under the provisions of Sections 2054 and 2058, Revised Statutes 1909, which require that all persons against whom any judgment shall have been recovered shall join in the writ unless otherwise provided, or as defendants in error under the terms prescribed in Section 2071, which requires notice in writing to be served on them twenty days before the return day of the writ. It is not necessary that we should classify these parties with either group. The Legislature no doub:t took the difficulty of doing this into consideration, among other things, in providing the limited remedy by appeal, but whether all these hundred or more parties should be made plaintiffs or defendants there has been no attempt in this ease to bring them in by notice in either capacity and for this reason alone the writ should either be “quashed” as provided in Section 2058 or “dismissed” • as provided in Section 2071. " . ,
PEE CUEIAM: — The foregoing” opinion of' BitowN, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.