51 W. Va. 269 | W. Va. | 1902
The county court of Barbour County instituted this action of assumpsit against James E. Hall to recover the costs made by it in a condemnation proceeding lately pending in the circuit court of said county in which said county court sought to take certain real estate of the defendant for the purpose of constructing thereon a public highway. After costs, amounting to four hundred and twenty-eight dollars and ninety-eight cents, had been made, the defendant, as a result of a parley or conference between him and .the members of the county court, made the following proposition:
“To the Hon., The County Court of Barbour County: If you will cause the suit of the county court of Barbour County against myself for the condemnation of a road through my farm in Elk district, to "be dismissed, I will, within ten clays from such dismissal, pay all the costs, both of the county, as well as myself. Feb. 20, 1897. James E. Hall.”
In the same month, the county court of said county entered the following order:
“In the matter of the condemnation proceedings now pending in the circuit court of this county, against James E. Hall, for the condemnation of a road through his lands in Elk district, upon consideration this court is of opinion that it is inexpedient*271 to proceed further with said suit, and the .defendant, James E. Hall, agreeing in writing to pay the costs of said suit, if the same be dismissed, it is ordered that the prosecuting attorney be directed to move the circuit court to dismiss said suit of Barbour County against the said Hall.”
On the 12th day of November, 1897, the following order was made by the circuit court:
“County Court of Barbour County v. James E. Hall. Condemnation. On motion of the county court, and with the consent of the defendant, it is ordered .that this cause be dismissed in accordance with the agreement between the county court and the defendant, James E. Hall, filed with the papers in this cause.”
The declaration contains the common counts in assumpsit and a special count upon the contract for the payment of the costs. The defendant having demurred, and the court having overruled his demurrer, he entered his plea of non-asumpsit and tendered a special plea in. writing, which is as follows: “County Court of Barbour County v. Jamse E. Hall. This day comes the defendant and says the plaintiff ought not to further prosecute this action because the agreement to pay the costs of the action of the county court against himself, in the declaration mentioned, was upon the agreement and consideration that the plaintiff should dismiss sxrch proceedings and prosecute no further right of any kind to take or condemn his land, or any part thereof, for public highway, yet, notwithstanding said agreement and the said consideration of said promise, the said county court has been and is now seeking to take defendant’s land by condemnation proceedings for said purposes aforesaid, being the same land substantially sought to be taken by said former condemnation proceedings, and contrary to-the said agreement and consideration of the undertaking on the part of the defendant to pay the costs mentioned in the declaration. And this he is ready to verify. James E. Hall.”
Objection to the filing of said plea was, overruled and the plaintiff excepted, whereupon issue was joined upon the plea of non-assumpsit and the special plea was replied to generally. A jury having been empaneled, the plaintiff introduced the written proposition made by Hall, copies of the orders made by the county court and circuit court dismissing said condemnation proceeding, the taxation of cost and also the evidence of two wit
From the argument contained in the briefs, it is inferred that the court below excluded the evidence on the ground that there was no legal and binding contract between the parties in reference to the cost, it being insisted by the attorneys for the plaintiff in error that, if there was any consideration for the promise'on the part of Iiall to pay the cost, it was the agreement of the county court never to establish a public road through his land, it being argued that the dismissal of the proceeding carried with it such agreement. It will be noticed that the proposal made by Hall, was to pay the cost in consideration of the dismissal of the condemnation proceeding. That proceeding was to establish a road according to a particular location upon his land. It was not for the purpose of establishing a road generally on his land without reference to location. The attempt to locate a road through his land had progressed to a point beyond the uncertainty of its particular location. Before the institution of the condemnation proceeding in the circuit court, the countjr court, it is presumed, appointed viewers or a committee of its own body and had the road surveyed and marked out on the ground and a plat thereof made. Its application filed in the circuit court and upon which the proceedings which Hall desired that the County Court should dismiss were founded, was for the taking of a specific parcel of land accurately described and designated. What peculiar value it .had that prompted its owner to the vigorous and endless resistance which produced this large amount^of cost, and his agreement to pay it, is undisclosed. But, as the county court.has discretion to prosecute to final determination such a proceeding to obtain land for the particular location of a public road, or to abandon that location at any time and begin proceedings to establish the road upon a different location, in which event, a second suit or proceeding would be separate and distinct from the first one and in reference to an entirely different parcel of land, it is
In the absence of any agreement between the county court and the proprietor of the land in reference to costs, in condemnation proceedings to take land for the purposes of a public highway, the applicant cannot recover costs, unless there has been stated in the application a sum of money which the applicant is ready to pay, and it afterward appear by the report confirmed or by a verdict of a jury, that the land may be taken with-outpajdng any greater compensation therefor. Section 24 of chapter 42, Code. Where a report is re-committed upon the motion of the land owner on the ground of insufficiency of compensation, and the sum ascertained by a subsequent report or verdict does not exceed the sum ascertained by the former report, the costs of the subsequent report are to be paid by the land owner. Section 21 of chapter 42, Code.. “In cases not otherwise provided for-, applicants shall pay the cost of the proceeding.” Section 25 of chapter 42, Code. Whether, in this case, the applicant stated in its application a sum which it was willing to pay in consequence of which it would be entitled to its costs out of the compensation, when determined, if that compensation turned out to be no greater than the sum stated in the application, or whether there had been a report which had’been re-committed, is not disclosed by this record. In the absence of such disclosure, it is presumed that the large amount of cost sued for here would not have been recoverable from the land owner, in any event, had the proceeding been prosecuted to the end. The county court, having had not even a contingent right to recover costs in the condemnation proceeding, by reason of its failure to offer the land owner any certain sum as compensation, whatever consideration there may be for the promise of Hall to pay the costs, lies in something other than the relinquishment by the county court of a right to recover costs in the condemnation proceeding. If there was no consideration for that promise, it is not binding. The definition of valuable consideration, given in 6 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, (2d Ed.) 704, is as follows: “In the abstract a valuable consideration may be defined to be the relinquishment by the promisee of some right which he may lawfully exercise or en force. As applied to sales, it is the relinquishment of the right of property; in respect to
It is also claimed that there is a variance between the contract alleged in the special count and the proof offered, but
It was error to exclude the evidence and the judgment must be reversed and the case remanded.
Reversed.