88 Pa. 509 | Pa. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court, March 3d 1879.
This was a proceeding in the court below under the Act of April 1st 1864, Pamph. L. 206, to compel the payment of the damages awarded by the jury for the opening of Sedgeley avenue. The report of the jury was filed May 2d 1874, and exceptions thereto were dismissed and report confirmed March 13th 1875. On October 24th 1878, the court below, upon petition filed, granted a rule to show cause why a writ of mandamus execution should not issue in favor of John Taylor, to the use of William Slater, the damages having been awarded to Taylor by the jury. This rule was made absolute November 2d 1878, and the writ issued the same day, in accordance with the prayer of the petition. The city sued out this writ of certiorari and assigned for error the order awarding the mandatory execution.
I do not understand the objection to be to the form of the remedy. A mandatory writ is the only means known to the law by which a municipal corporation can be compelled to pay a debt or perform a duty. The writ of fieri facias will not lie against such corporations: Monaghan v. The City, 4 Casey 207. If then the payment of road damages cannot be enforced against the city in this form of proceeding, it cannot be compelled at all. It is contended, however, that the Court of Quarter Sessions has not the power to issue such mandatory order, but that suit must be brought upon the award in the Common Pleas and a judgment recovered thereon. If this be so, the result must be the same in the end, as the Common Pleas can only enforce its judgment when recovered against the city in the precise manner in which the Court of Quarter Sessions is now attempting to compel payment. The effect of such a mode of proceeding would be to entail upon the city a considerable amount of additional costs in each award of road damages, and to cause vexatious and unnecessary delay to every property holder whose property has been taken by the city.
It would servo no good purpose and unnecessarily protract this opinion to review all the legislation in regard to the opening of streets and assessment of damages therefor in the city of Philadelphia. Prior to the Act of 21st April 1855, Pamph. L. 266, the payment of street damages was voluntary on the part of the city. The city might not open the street under the old system in force for many years ; it was prohibited from opening a street until actual payment of the damages; and unless the damages were paid within one year, the whole proceedings fell: Act April 3d 1804, 4 Sm. Laws 198. The Act of 1855 authorized councils, whenever they
It is manifest this act worked a radical change in the road law of the city of Philadelphia. Eor the first time authority is given to open streets without the payment of damages or giving security therefor. The command of the act is that when the award of damages is confirmed by the court “the street shall forthwith be opened.” And it imposes a corresponding duty upon the city, for the succeeding sentence in the same section declares, “ and said city shall pay to the' respective owners of the property damaged, or their legal representatives, the damages so assessed for said opening.” There is another peculiarity in the Act of 1864, viz., the finality of proceedings under it. This does not appear in any of the previous acts. Under them the assessment of damages was more in the nature of an appraisement of the value of the land provided it should be taken. It was optional with the city to take the land, and as a sequence optional with the city to pay. But in proceedings under the Act of 1864, there is a final adjudication of the whole matter The damages are assessed against the city as the
We are of opinion that the confirmation of the award under the Act of 1864, is a final judgment. Moreover, it is a judgment for the payment of money. If drawn out in form it would be that the party do recover from the city his damages, &c. This is by reason of the present duty of the city to pay contained in the Act of 1864, and which is not to be found in any prior acts, except those relating specially to Eairmount Park.
It is contended, however, that even if a confirmed award under the Act of 1864 is a judgment, there is no power in the Court of Quarter Sessions to issue the writ of mandamus. I concede that the Quarter Sessions cannot issue a mandamus. It never had such power. This writ is a high prerogative writ, and in England issued only out of-the King’s Bench. In this state it issued formerly only out of the Supreme Court in which the powers of the King’s Bench are lodged. The Act of 14th June 1836, Pamph. L. 626, conferred the power upon the Courts of Common Pleas. Under the present Constitution the power to issue it in this court fell with most of our original jurisdiction, except in the single instance of a mandamus to courts of inferior jurisdiction. See art. 5, sect. 3. But the right to issue a mandamus, and the right of a court to enforce its own judgments are entirely different questions. The latter right is inherent in every court, and must be presumed to exist in the absence of any legislative inhibition. The writ issued ■in this case, although called a mandamus for convenience, is not so in point of fact. It was simply an order issued by the court to enforce a judgment standing upon its records. This is nothing new. The payments of road damages have been made upon orders issued in the Quarter Sessions from the foundation of the government. No other court ever had any jurisdiction. Such orders were issued in Price v. The County Commissioners, 1 Whart. 1; Commonwealth v. The Commissioners, 2 Id. 286. In each of those cases the Quarter Sessions issued its order on the county treasurer to pay; the treasurer declined for want of funds, and an application was then made to this court to enforce the order of the court
There being, as I have endeavored to show, a final judgment in the court below, is there any sufficient reason why that court may not enforce its judgment under the Act of 1884 ? It is said that to do so would change the nature of the payment; that by the 8th section of the General Road Law of 13th June 1836, Pamph. L. 555, the damages awarded by the jury are required to be paid in county stock. It is very true that Stewart v. The County of Philadelphia, 2 Barr 340, recognised this section of the Act of 1836 as being in force in Philadelphia at that time. It is not in force there now, so far as payment in county stock is concerned. There is now no such stock out of which such payments can be made. It was swept away by consolidation. There is now no county board, as there was prior to 1854, to issue such stocks. The bonds of the old districts were all paid, or taken up by new certificates of the loan of the city of Philadelphia. It is impossible, therefore, to pay road damages in county stock. And even if it were thought desirable to pay road damages in city loan, and the city were authorized to do so, it cannot be pretended that any act of the legislature could compel the property holder to accept such loan in payment. The
It is further said, however, that the landowner must either wait until an appropriation shall be made by councils under the 4th section of the Act of 13th May 1856, Pamph. L. 568, Purd. 1288, pl. 128, or bring his action of debt in the Common Pleas, under the Act of 21st April 1855, Purd. 1287, pl. 124, Pamph. L. 266. .The first objection seems entirely to overlook the plain reason why the legislature, by the Act of 1864, required the city to pay the damages upon the confirmation of the award of the jury. It is a part of our fundamental law that compensation shall be paid or secured before the property of the citizen shall be taken for public use. In view of the unsatisfactory financial condition of some of the municipal corporations of the state, this court has gone far enough, in my judgment, in holding that actual payment or security is not necessary on the part of such corporations to enable them to take private property for public use; that the taxing power in the hands of such bodies is a sufficient security; and that if the legislature provide a remedy by which the person whose property is taken may enforce his rights, it is sufficient: City of Pittsburgh v. Scott, 1 Barr 309; Commissioners v. Wood, 10 Id. 93; Yost’s Report, 5 Harris 524; Keene v. Borough, of Bristol, 2 Casey 46. Where, as by the Act of 1864, authority is given to the city to take the property of the citizen for public use forthwith upon the confirmation of the award, we can understand wrhy the corresponding duty of payment was in the same act imposed upon the city. Nor is there .any reason why the citizen whose property has been taken should be compelled to knock at the doors of councils and ask for an appropriation. They may or may not make such appropriation; or they may unreasonably delay it. His property having been taken, and his right to compensation established by the judgment of a competent tribunal, he is in a position to demand satisfaction, and it does not rest with city councils to deny it, or to delay i-t at their pleasure. Nor is there any sufficient reason why he should be compelled to bring an action of debt in the Common Pleas. To do so, under the Act of 1855, would necessarily involve the delay of a year. It may well be questioned, in view of the constitutional provision above cited, whether the legislature may lawfully restrain the property owner whose land has been taken without payment or
The case of the City of Philadelphia v. Miskey, 18 P. F. Smith 49, was cited as authority against the right of the court below to issue the order in question. That was a suit upon an award by a jury appointed to assess damages under the Acts of Assembly authorizing land to be taken forFairmount Park. The Act of 14th April 1868, Pamph. L. 1088, which is a supplement to the Fair-mount Park Act, provides in the tenth sect., that “ whenever any report of the said commissioners shall have been confirmed by the court, the valuation made shall be forthwith payable by the city of Philadelphia.” This is substantially the language of the Act of
In the case in hand there was no question of title. Damages were awarded to John Taylor. A portion of said damages was paid to him upon a prior mandatory writ issued out,of the Quarter Sessions. The present proceeding was had upon the petition of William Slater, setting forth that said damages were awarded for two lots of ground, as to one of which the said Taylor never had title, but the title to which was in the petitioner. As the title of the latter is set out in his petition, is not denied by the city, and is expressly admitted by Taylor, it cannot be said there was any dispute about title, and we must assume the court below was satisfied of the validity of Slater’s claim to the balance of the sum awarded by the jury and not paid over to Taylor.
Since the passage of .the Act of 1864, it has been the practice of the Court of Quarter Sessions to issue like mandatory writs to compel the payment of road damages in the city of Philadelphia. Until recently, I never knew its power to do so denied, or even doubted. This is not conclusive, yet it is not without weight as showing the uniform construction placed upon that act by the learned and experienced judges of that court.
The proceedings are affirmed.