delivered the opinion of the court:
The Department of Public Works and Buildings appeals directly to this court from a judgment of the circuit court of Grundy County awarding compensation to the defendants for land and access rights taken in the improvement of U.S. Route 66 as a freeway under the Illinois Freeways Act.
The appeal is made directly to this court because a freehold interest and public revenue are involved.
The pleadings consist of the petition in condemnation; defendants’ answer with a copy of a certain lease attached; petitioner’s motion to strike the answer, the lease, and that part of the answer referring to the lease; petitioner’s motion that compensation for the land taken be ascertained by a jury; defendants’ cross petition, and petitioner’s motion for a new trial. Petitioner’s motions to strike the answer and the lease, and for ascertainment of compensation by a jury and for a new trial were all denied.
The Statе produced four witnesses, and the State’s testimony as to value of the tract in question was as to fair cash market value not taking into consideration the lease in issue. Defendants’ witnesses as to the fair market value of the premises considered a lease from the Shell Oil Company which had been negotiated by the defendants in good faith for a considerable period of time and entered into a short time prior to the filing of the petition in condemnation. The evidence clearly shows that the property in question had been considered for, purchased for, leased for, plans prepared for, and the property cleared for a gas station, truck stop and restaurant, all in good faith prior to the commencement of the proceeding. Petitioner’s proof placed the value of the land before taking at between $5000 and $6000, without taking into consideration the Shell Oil Company lease. Defendants’ proof showed the value of all the premises, with the lease taken into consideration, between $14,000 and $18,000. The trial court, after hearing the evidence without a jury and after a personal view of the premises awarded damages for land taken in the amount of $1400, for access rights taken $2400, and for damages to land nоt taken $7000.
The appeal presents two issues to this court for determination, vis.:
1. Does the State of Illinois in proceedings to condemn property for public use by the State have a right to a trial by jury under the Illinois constitution of 1870 and the Illinois Eminent Domain Act? Ill. Rev. Stat. 1951, chap. 47, par. 1 et seq.
2. Was the Shell Oil Co. lease properly admissible in evidence as material to the valuation of the property interest involved ?
The question whether there is a right to trial by jury in condemnation proceedings where the compensation is to be paid by the State of Illinois presents a question of first impression never directly decided by this court. Section 13 of article II of the constitution of 1870 provides in part as follows: “Private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation. Such compensation, when not made by the state, shall be ascertained by a jury, as shall be prescribed by law.” Section 1 of the Eminent Domain Act (Ill. Rev. Stаt. 1951, chap. 47, par. 1,) provides substantially the same as the foregoing constitutional provision with slightly varying language, as follows: “Private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation; and that in all cases in which compensation is not made by the state in its corporate caрacity, such compensation shall be ascertained by a jury, as hereinafter prescribed.” Such statutory provision in the Eminent Domain Act has been the law of the State of Illinois since the approval on April 10, 1872, of “An act to provide for the exercise of the right of eminent domain.”
“Eminent domain” is a phrase whiсh has been used for hundreds of years to designate the power and right of the sovereign State, or those to whom its power has been delegated, to take private property within its jurisdiction for public use without the owner’s consent, upon paying due compensation. Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Louisville and Nаshville Railroad Co.
The power and right of eminent domain is inherent in the sovereign State, existing independently of written constitutions or statutory laws thereof, regulated by appropriate legislation, limited only by the cоnstitutional provision for compensation, and extending to every kind of property. South Park Comrs. v. Montgomery Ward & Co.
Both the constitutions of 1818 and of 1848 provided: “Nor shall any man’s property be taken or applied to public use without the consent of his representatives in the general assembly, nor without just compensation being made to him.” Const, of 1818, article VIII, sec. 11; Const, of 1848, article XIII, sec. 11.
In People v. Stuart,
However, in Johnson v. Joliet and Chicago Railroad Co.
In Wabash Railroad Co. v. Coon Run Drainage and Levee Dist.
In view of the foregoing decisions, it must be concluded that the right to a jury trial where the sovereign State exercises its right of eminent domain is not guaranteed as a matter of common law, nor by the Bill of Rights of the Illinois сonstitution. This conclusion is supported by the statement contained in Lewis, Eminent Domain, 3rd edition, volume 2, sec. 509, page 922, where it is stated, “In the absence of any express provision on the subject, the authorities almost uniformly hold that it is not a matter of constitutional right. The line of reasoning upon which these decisions are founded is that, before any of our constitutions were adopted, it had been the practice in America and England to ascertain the compensation to be paid for property taken for public use by other agencies than a common-law jury; that this practice was well known to the framers of those constitutions, and that presumably they did not intend by any general language employed to abrogate a practice so universal and of such long standing and against which no complaint existed.”
Likewise, in 18 Am. Jur. “Eminent Domain,” sec. 337, page 979, it is stated as follows: “Trial by jury in eminent domain proceedings is not essential to due prоcess of law. A State may authorize any just and reasonable method of determining the amount of compensation for land taken for the public use without violating the 14th amendment or similar provisions of the State constitutions. Most of the State constitutions contain some specific provision in regard to trial by jury, but none of them require jury trial in all justiciable controversies that may arise. The usual requirement is that the right to jury trial shall remain ‘inviolate,’ or the idea is expressed in some other phrasing that no law shall be enacted cutting off trial by jury in such cases as it was customary to employ it when the constitution was adopted. As it has always been customary in almost every State to have the damages in eminent domain cases determined by three or more appraisers or commissioners without the intervention of a jury at any stage of the proceeding, it is held in such States that there is no constitutional right to jury trial in eminent domain cases.”
Inasmuch as therе was no common-law right to trial by jury in eminent domain proceedings guaranteed and preserved by the Illinois constitution, and inasmuch as section 13 of article II of the constitution excepts those cases where eminent domain compensation is made by the State from the requirement that eminent domain compensation be ascertained by a jury, we must conclude that the Illinois constitution does not require a jury trial where the State is the condemning agency.
There being no constitutional limitation in such instances, the General Assembly of the State has the power and right to specify such method of determining compensation in еminent domain cases where the State is the condemning party as it deems proper and reasonable, subject only to the limitation that it shall enact no special law where a general law could be made applicable. However, an examination of the acts of the General Assembly in reference to eminent domain discloses no provision by the General Assembly providing for the method of determining compensation where property is taken or damaged by the State, the only statutory requirement applicable to a taking by the State being that the petition in condemnation shall be signed by the Govеrnor or such other person as he shall direct or as shall be provided by law. Ill. Rev. Stat. 1951, chap. 47, par. 2.
The only variance from the language of the constitution found in section 1 of the Eminent Domain Act, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1951, chap. 47, par. 1,) in exempting those condemnation cases where compensation is made by the Stаte from the requirement for jury trial, is found in the language specifying that cases in which compensation is made by the State “in its corporate capacity” shall not be included. This act of the General Assembly was adopted within two years after the adoption of the constitution of 1870 and has remained in the same fоrm from then to the present date. From what has been heretofore noted as to the nature of the State’s power and right of eminent domain and earlier methods of determining the compensation to be paid for the taking of property and the exercise of such power, it is apparent that the сlause “in its corporate capacity” was used by the General Assembly to designate those cases in which the State itself, in its sovereign capacity as a State, is the condemning party, as distinguished from those cases in which the condemning party is a subordinate governmental unit or other agency to which the State has delegated its sovereign power and right of eminent domain.
The General Assembly not having chosen to prescribe by general law a method for determination of compensation to be paid where private property is to be taken by the State itself in the exercise of its power of eminent domain, the determination of just compensation for such taking becomes a judicial proceeding to be regulated by the court in the exercise of its judicial discretion. In the instant case a duly constituted judicial tribunal having heard the sworn testimony and evidence of all interested parties, and having viewed the premisеs itself, we cannot find any abuse of judicial discretion in denying a trial by jury, no trial by jury being guaranteed at common law or by our constitution, nor required by statutory enactment.
By such conclusion we do not hold nor infer that a jury trial in such instances is prohibited by our constitution or statutory enactments, but do hold that unless and until the General Assembly acts upon the subject, the granting or withholding of a jury trial in condemnation proceedings where the State is the condemning party, as distinguished from a petitioner to whom the power of eminent domain has been delegated by the State, is within the sound judicial discretion of the court, and it is not for this court to legislate judicially uрon the subject.
It being elementary and fundamental that in condemnation proceedings the land taken is to be valued at its highest and best use as shown by the evidence, and as rental value of property is clearly an important question to be considered in determining the fair cash market value of property, it is оur opinion that the lease of the property here in question with Shell Oil Company, which was negotiated and executed in good faith prior to commencement of the condemnation proceedings in question, was properly admitted in evidence. City of Chicago v. Lord,
For the reasons heretofore discussed, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
± Judgment affirmed.
