This is an action in ejectment by the plaintiff against the defendant for the possession of seventeen acres, more or less, of land in the northwest corner of Scott county, being the same land that was condemned in a proceeding commenced by the Southern Illinois and Missouri Bridge Company on the 24th of April, 1902, in the circuit court of Scott county, Missouri, for the appropriation of a strip' of land containing 20.3 acres, approximately four thousand feet long and two hundred feet wide, for its approach to its bridge over the Mississippi river from a point in Alexander county, Illinois, to a point opposite thereto in Scott county, Missouri, and known as the Thebes bridge, and for a right of way for its railway tracks and terminal yards, in said Scott county. When that proceeding was begun the ¡circuit court of Dunklin county, to which the proceeding had been sent on change of venue, held that the defendant herein, the plaintiff in that proceeding, had no right to condemn said strip of land for the purposes aforesaid. Prom that judgment the defendant herein, the plaintiff therein, appealed to this court and this court reversed the judgment of the circuit court of Dunklin county and remanded the cause, with specific directions to the circuit court to appoint three commissioners to assess the damages which the defendants therein, Stone, Finley and others, would sustain by the appropriation of said strip' of ground. The decision of this court on that appeal is reported in Southern Illinois & Missouri Bridge Company v. Stone,
Thereupon said Stone and others, the defendants therein, appealed.from the judgment of this court to the Supreme Court of the United States, which court on May 13th, 1907, affirmed the judgment of this court (Stone v. Southern Ill. & Mo. Bridge Co.,
There is and can be no dispute as to the controlling facts in this case, as they are all matters of record save and except the receipt by the plaintiff of the ten thousand dollars damages assessed by the jury as compensation for the appropriation of the strip of land in suit, and as the plaintiff took down that sum and receipted the clerk therefor after the judgment in that proceeding had been affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States, that fact could not have appeared in the record in this case which was made up at the October term, 1904, of the Scott Circuit Court, but as already said, it was conceded and admitted in open court by counsel for plaintiff on the argument of this appeal in this court.
It is at once apparent that unless we overrule our former decisions in this identical matter, they present an insuperable obstacle to plaintiff’s recovery of the strip of land for which it sues in this case. While we see nothing in the contentions of plaintiff that was not
I. When this cause was here on the first appeal, involving the right of the defendant bridge company to appropriate this particular strip of land for its ap1 proaches and terminal yards, every reason now urged was pressed on this court against said right, but this court held those objections were untenable and reversed the judgment denying that right with specific directions to the circuit court to' allow said appropriation and appoint three commissioners to assess the damages for such condemnation and the circuit court followed our judgment and rendered its judgment condemning the strip now in suit, and upon the strength of our judgment the defendant took possession of said strip after depositing the damages assessed by the commissioners, and afterwards by the jury, and proceeded to construct its piers and grade and construct its tracks connecting its bridge with the Missouri shore, at an immense outlay of money and labor.
In a word, property rights of great value have been acquired by defendant on the strength of and in reliance upon our judgment as to this particular tract of land. This court, in Reed v. Ownby, 44 Mo. l. c.
In Dunklin County v. Chouteau,
In the subsequent case of Wilson v. Beckwith,
II. But this is not all. When the plaintiff in this cause after the affirmance of the judgment of this court in
In Austin v. Loring,
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
