The nature of the action here sought to be reviewed was the condemnation of certain private property for public use, in the City of St. Louis, including a lot or parcel of land owned by defendant. From a -judgment of condemnation and the assessment of benefits against the defendant, the latter appeals.
The Board of Aldermen of the City of St. Louis, in conformity with Section 1, of Article 21, of the Charter of that city, provided by ordinance for the appropriation for public use of the property in question. In furtherance of this ordinance, and as required by the section of the charter cited, а petition was filed by the City Counselor in the circuit court of said city, containing the essential allegations of a pleading of this character.
No question is involved as to the formal sufficiency of the рetition, or that the requirements of the charter were not complied with. While many matters were urged by the defendant in its exceptions to the report of the commissioners authorized to be apрointed in a proceeding of this nature, and its motion for a new trial, defendant’s contentions in its brief and in the oral argument are limited to a narrow compass. First, as to the invalidity of Sections 1 to 8, inclusive, of Article 21, of the Charter of the City of St. Louis, as in violation of Section 1, Article 14, of the Amendments to the Constitution of the United States, concerning due process of law; and second, that the commissioners, in assessing the benefits, unjustly discriminated' against the defend
The burden of the decisions cited by defendant in support of its contention, is tо the effect that the complainants, in those cases, were not accorded such a hearing as the law contemplates and, as a consequence, that they were thereby denied a constitutional right.
To illustrate: In St. Louis Land Co. v. Kansas City,
In Houck v. Little River District,
In Fallbrook Dist. v. Bradley,
In Spencer v. Merchant,
In Stuart v. Palmer,
These eases, therefore, are inapplicable here, because the facts disclose that the defendant was accorded every right to which the complainants in the cases cited were held to be entitled. [Branson v. Glee,
From all of which it follows, that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed. It is so ordered.
