89 Va. 92 | Va. | 1892
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in error was prosecuted under the city ordinance for maintaining a fence across a part of what was alleged to be a public street of the said city, and resisting the city officials in their attempt to remove it. The plaintiff in error resisted the removal of the fence upon the. ground
The alleged errors complained of are not assigned in the proceedings in this case. The act is admitted of constructing a street, which has been laid off by condemnation proceedings by the town; but the defense is that the condemnation proceedings by which the street was opened are erroneous and illegal and null and void.
The city of Manchester gave notice to the plaintiff in error, Foster, of the intention, on a day named, to apply to the court by law appointed for the purpose, for the appointment' of commissioners, pursuant to the provisions of chapter 16 of the Code of Virginia, for the assessment of damages for the land taken from him, which was necessary for Semmes street— the street in question. The said Foster accepted service, as follows :
“ I acknowledge legal service of the above notice, and designate my friend,--, to attend to m,y interests.
" John H. Foster.”
The law requires that the hustings court shall appoint five disinterested freeholders, any three- of whom may act, to ascertain the value of land needed in said case, if the council or town cannot agree on the terms with those entitled to the land vranted (sec. 6, chap. 56, Code 1873), and that ten days’ previous notice shall be given to the tenant of the freehold (sec. 7, chap. 56); 'and the seventh section also provides that if there be no such tenant within the corporation, the
The objection to the legality of the condemnation proceedings is for want of notice to the tenant of the freehold, and that the record does not affirmatively show that any effort was ever made to agree with the person entitled to the land upon the amount of compensation which should be paid for the land, before the proceedings were had; and because the local assessment for betterments were equal to the compensation allowed in the condemnation proceedings.
The first question we have to consider arises upon the fact that the record shows upon its face that all the proceedings were as the law directs, unless there be want of notice to the tenant of the freehold, such as the law directs. And the court certifies that the plaintiff in error had ten days’ previous notice. Throughout the condemnation proceedings there is no exception to any ruling of the court, nor is there any appeal in that case from first to last. This judgment, of a court of competent jurisdiction, with all the parties in interest before it, is now assailed upon the grounds above stated. If the defendant, in the condemnation proceedings, had any defenses which he could have made when that case was pending, he waived them in that case, and he comes too late, after final judgment, when he seeks to raise these same questions in this proceeding, which he could have raised, but declined to raise, in the first case, and suffered the matter to be adjudicated against him; and now seeks to defend his action in obstructing a street of the town upon the ground that it is no street, overlooking the fact that in certain legal proceedings, in a court of competent jurisdiction, in which he was a party,
The proceedings were all in accordance with law, and the record of that case furnishes no justification for the acts prosecuted in this. A judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction upon a question directly involved in one suit is conclusive as to that question in another suit between the same parties. Min. Inst., Vol. IV., p. 719; Fishburne v. Ferguson, 85 Va. 324; Diehl v. Marchant, 87 Va., p. 449. The judgment of the hustings court upon the condemnation proceedings was final in the premises and conclusive of the question involved here. It follows that the judgment of the hustings court, appealed from here, must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.