9 Ind. 558 | Ind. | 1857
The Lake Erie, Wabash and St. Louis Railroad Company, having failed to agree with Robert Heath for the right of way for their road through his land, filed an instrument of appropriation of the same, accompanied by maps, plans, surveys, &c., in the clerk’s office of Tippecanoe county, being the county within which the land was situated. Thereupon the judge of the Tippeccmoe Circuit Court appointed three appraisers to assess the damages upon said appropriation, who valued them at 1,000 dollars, and so reported.
Upon the report being made to the Circuit Court, Heath appeared and excepted to it. He also filed a complaint against the company, asked process upon it, and that his damages might be assessed by a jury. The Court set aside the assessment of the appraisers, and ordered the damages to be assessed as asked by Heath. The jury found them to be 1,600 dollars. The company moved the
The report was probably rightly set aside for substantial defects. 5 Ind. R. 414. In what manner should the Court have ordered a new assessment to take place?
It is contended, on the one hand, that that clause in the constitution which declares that, “in all civil cases, the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate,” forbids an assessment of damages except by jury, unless the same be waived; while on the other, it is insisted that that clause has no application to the case at bar, because it is not a civil case.
The clause in the constitution of the United States touching jury trials, it may be remarked, has no application here, as it operates only upon the Courts of the United States, and not upon those of the several states. Barron v. The Mayor, &c., 7 Pet. 243.—8 Ind. R. on p. 552.
The above provision in our own constitution, applies in terms but to civil cases. What, then, within its meaning, is a civil case? Not every case which is not a criminal, is a civil one. “ Civil case” had a definition, a meaning, at common law, when the early constitutions of this country were formed; and it has been held that the term was used in those constitutions in the common-law sense. See Willyard v. Hamilton, 7 Ohio R. part 2, 112; Livingston v. The Mayor, &c., 8 Wend. 85; Beekman v. The Saratoga, &c. Railroad Co., 3 Paige 45; Gold v. The Vermont Central, &c. Co., 19 Vt. R. 478; Wells v. Caldwell, 1 A. K. Marsh. (Ky.) 441; Harris v. Wood, 6 Mon. 641; and the cases cited in French v. Lighty, at this term
It may be- fairly argued that the term should be con
Such being the fact, it follows that this class of cases may legitimately be ranked as civil, and, hence, held to be within the constitutional provision above quoted. See Sedgw. on Stat. supra.
It is a provision, however, which a party may waive. Had the defendant below in this case not demanded a jury, but acquiesced in the appointment of a new set of appraisers, the case would have stood like an ordinary one where a jury is waived. But, having demanded a jury, the Court was bound to disregard the special provision, and give a jury under the general law, as was done.
The complaint filed by Heath was of no consequence. It was unnecessary. It was his right to appear in the Circuit Court and demand a jury to retry the question of damages.
"We may observe that the legislature may prescribe the trial by jury in cases where the constitution does not give it as a right; but they cannot withhold it in cases where it is SO given.
It may be observed further that this point was not raised by either party in McMahon v. The Cincinnati, &c. Co., 5 Ind. R. 413, and, hence, was properly left unnoticed by the Court.
The judgment is affirmed, with 1 per cent, damages and costs.
Ante, 475.