183 Ga. 290 | Ga. | 1936
The record in this case presents the question whether the State Highway Board and its members can be compelled by writ of mandamus to pay the sum of money found by a jury in favor of the eondemnee in condemnation proceedings which the board had begun and prosecuted to final judgment, no writ of error having been sued out from the final judgment. The petition for mandamus was filed by T. H. Harrison, who was the defendant in the condemnation proceedings. Buie nisi was issued; and when the case came on to be heard on its merits, all questions of law and fact and certain agreed facts were by the parties submitted to the judge for his decision without the intervention of a jury. The facts agreed upon were to the following effect: The State of Georgia, through its State Highway Department had theretofore filed a condemnation suit in rem, under the act of 1914 (Ga. L. 1914, p. 92, Code, § 36-1104 et seq.), against Harrison’s land. Assessors, who had been appointed for the purpose, had fixed the value of the land sought to be condemned at $2000; they had also fixed the consequential damages at $1500, and the consequential benefits at $500; the condemnors appealed from the award of the assessors to a jury, who in their verdict found in favor of Harrison $2232'.50, and on this verdict the court entered a judgment, which was prepared by counsel fot Harrison, but was not consented to by counsel for the State or its highway department. In that judgment the court adjudged the fee-simple title to the land involved in the condemnation suit “to
The issues in this case may be condensed into two questions: First, is the finding and judgment of the superior court a valid judgment? Second, can it be enforced as against the State Highway Department by mandamus? To deny that the judgment is valid is to assert that under no circumstances can the State Highway Department be subjected to suit; and to go even further and say that where the department itself instituted the suit, its acts
In a large number of cases in this State the right to be paid for property condemned for public uses has been maintained by injunction restraining the condemnor from using the land until payment has been made, though an intervening judgment for the value of the property was necessary to finally effect complete relief. In the absence of any other remedy, mandamus is an available remedy in the circumstances of this case. “Where the right to damages has accrued, mandamus would lie against the proper persons to compel them to proceed and have the damages assessed.” 2 Lewis on Eminent Domain, § 879(614). In this case the superior court of Macon County had jurisdiction of the matter in the rendition of the judgment fixing the damages at $2232.50; and it is a settled principle that “if the tribunal which made the award had jurisdiction, .mere errors or irregularities will not be a defense to a petition for mandamus to pay the award.” 2 Lewis, Em. Dom. § 878(613), citing Crise v. Auditor, 17 Ark. 572; Higgins v. Chicago, 18 Ill. 276; People v. Township Board, 2 Mich. 187; People v. Lowell, 9 Mich. 144; People v. Supervisors of St. Lawrence, 5 Cow. 292; People v. Fitch, 147 N. Y. 355 (41 N. E. 695); State v. Wilson, 17 Wis. 687. “If the tribunal did not have jurisdiction, the award is a nullity and mandamus will not lie to enforce its payment.” 2 Lewis, Em. Dom. § 878(613). We can not hold in this case that the assessment and award and the subsequent verdict of the jury in the superior court is or was a mere nullity. On the contrary, the proceedings seem to have been
It is settled that, in the absence of any other remedy, mandamus is an available remedy in the circumstances of this ease, Harrison’s right in his judgment became a vested right. The highway department pursued the litigation to judgment, when it might have dismissed the condemnation proceedings. Nisbet, J., speaking for the court in Parham v. Justices, 9 Ga. 341, 344, said: “Our doctrine farther is, however, that the property of the citizen can not be taken for any purpose of public utility or convenience, un
In delivering the opinion of the court Mr. Presiding Justice Beck said: “In section 5206 of the Civil Code it is provided that 'All corporations or persons authorized to take or damage private property for public purposes shall proceed as herein set forth.5 And then follow other provisions as to payment or tender of compensation; and if the parties can not agree upon the compensation to be paid, other sections provide for notice, hearing, evidence, and assessment of value and of damages; for the finding of the assessors, etc.; then for the filing and record of the award. These sections are immediately followed by provisions for an appeal, final judgment, etc. In the present case no appeal was entered, but within ten days a dismissal of the proceedings was entered by the condemnor upon the papers in the case; and after-wards notice was given under section 5209 of the Code, and was served upon the owner. . . It is insisted by counsel for the plaintiff in error that 'A proceeding to condemn property for public use is not in the nature of a contract between the owner and the condemning party; and until the property is actually taken and compensation is made or provided, the power of the condemning party over the matter-is not exhausted,5 — and cases are cited to sustain this contention. And further, that 'Until the property is actually taken possession of or paid for, the landowner has no vested interest.5 And the plaintiff in error argues and insists that it has the right to institute the new proceedings in this case. In one sense, there was in this case at the time of the dismissal possibly no vested right in the landowner in the ordinary sense in which that term is used; and the condemnor, under the various authorities, might abandon the proceedings and give notice of such abandonment to the landowner, and thereby prevent the collection of the amount awarded by the assessors. But in another sense, the landowner did acquire, if not a vested right in the amount of the award or judgment, a right to set up the finding of the award as an estoppel, in the nature of estoppel by judgment, against a second proceeding. Equity certainly will not tolerate that a condemnor, who has been vested with the power of eminent domain, vested with that high right that the needs of tbe public may be met in certain cases, shall, after having had the benefit of a trial
In the act of 1914, supra, the power of condemnation was extended to a department of the State government, the State Highway Department, while section 5206 of the Code of 1910 (Code of 1933, § 36-301), quoted by Mr. Justice Beck, was copied from the act Of 1894; but in the act of 1914 it is expressly provided that the act of 1894 is not repealed or superseded. In the Thomas case, supra, the case of Central Georgia Power Co. v. Nolan, 135 Ga. 443 (69 S. E. 561), was examined and distinguished, as also was Georgia Railway & Power Co. v. Mooney, 147 Ga. 212 (93 S. E. 206). Mr. Presiding Justice Beck concluded the opinion with this language, in which the entire court including this writer con
From the length of time which has elapsed since the rendition of the judgment in favor of the plaintiff in this case, it might be
Judgment reversed.