257 S.W. 441 | Mo. | 1923
Lead Opinion
The essential issue in this case is sharply definable. The question is whether the School District of Kansas City, which instituted a proceeding to condemn land of the appellant for school purposes, *694 and, after prosecuting that proceeding for several months, dismissed it, is liable for the attorney's fees and other attendant expenses incurred by appellant in its defense, in that proceeding.
The appellant sued for the sum of $9107.66, the amount which it had paid out, or had become legally liable to pay, by reason of the institution of the proceeding to condemn, and set forth a schedule of the items thereof. The school district filed a general demurrer to the petition, which was sustained by the trial court. Appellant stood upon its petition, and from the resultant judgment the case is here on appeal. The petition is long, but need not be set forth, nor is extensive reference to the facts therein stated necessary; and only so much will be attempted as suffices to make plain the nature of the question to be decided, and the circumstances under which it arose.
The appellant is an incorporated company and the original owner of a large number of lots constituting a platted addition to Kansas City, known as Meadow Park Addition, comprising a tract of about eighty acres. The addition was established with the purpose, the petition states, of making it "a comfortable, agreeable and first class residential district;" and, in the conveyances made by the company to purchasers of lots certain restrictive covenants and agreements were imposed upon the grantees, and their assigns, as to the character of building and occupancy permitted. These covenants may be found fully set forth in the opinion of this court, in Peters v. Buckner,
On the 11th day of December, 1920, the school district instituted its suit in the circuit court to condemn Blocks 3 and 4 of this addition, owned by appellant, as a site for a public school house. The suit was against appellant and against all other owners of lots in said addition, and the object sought was to condemn the site, and also to condemn the rights or easements of appellant and of all other owners of lots arising out of the aforesaid restrictive covenants. The condemnation proceeding *695 advanced to the appointment by the circuit court of commissioners to assess the damages. Then, and therein, arose a controversy between appellant and other lot owners on the one side, and the school district and the circuit court on the other, as to whether the rights or easements arising out of the aforesaid covenants should be considered in assessing damages. That phase of the controversy was settled in the original proceedings instituted in this court by appellant and others in Peters v. Buckner, supra. Thereafter the condemnation proceedings were resumed in the circuit court. It is alleged in the petition that the commissioners, instructed as to the law in accordance with the ruling of this court in the Peters Case, had agreed among themselves as to the amount of damages to be allowed to each property owner, amounting in the aggregate to a much larger sum than was anticipated by the board of directors of the school district; that pending preparation of the report thereof, certain members of said board of directors interfered, and procured other persons to do so, by protests, so that said commissioners were embarrassed, and made no report, and were discharged by the court; and thereafter, on December 21, 1921, said school district, through its counsel, without notice to appellant, dismissed said condemnation proceeding. The petition alleges that appellant had estimated and claimed the sum of $160,000 as the value of the property rights which were sought to be appropriated, and states, upon information and belief, that said commissioners, if not interfered with, would have reported and allowed to plaintiff the sum of $100,000 as damages. The total amount demanded by appellant in this action is made up of the sum of $8000, for services of its attorneys in the condemnation proceeding and in prosecuting the mandamus suit in this court, $127.66 for traveling and other expenses incurred in the mandamus suit, $900 for the time and services of the executive officers of appellant company, and $35 for plats and blue prints used in the condemnation proceeding. *696
In the state of the pleadings, the question here is whether the school district is liable to appellant at all. The School District of Kansas City is organized and exists under the provisions of Article XV of Chapter 102, Revised Statutes 1919, governing districts in cities of seventy-five thousand and less than five hundred thousand inhabitants. Under Section 11403 of that article the school district is a body corporate, and may sue and be sued. The condemnation proceeding was undertaken under authority of Section 11428, wherein it is provided that if a desired site for school purposes is not purchaseable through failure to agree on the price, or otherwise, "the board may, in the name of the district, proceed to condemn the same in the same manner as provided for condemnation of right-of-way in Article II of Chapter 13 of the Revised Statutes." Said Article II contains the provisions governing condemnation proceedings by railroad, telegraph, and other corporations therein mentioned. There are numerous decisions of the appellate courts of this State, beginning at an early time, dealing with the right of corporations, after instituting such a proceeding, to discontinue the same, and with the question of their liability to the property owner who has incurred expense or loss by reason thereof. The liability of a railroad company under these conditions has been sustained in the following cases: North Missouri Railroad Co. v. Lackland,
In the early cases mentioned the right to discontinue the proceeding was a question in issue. It was held that the right existed, and in the later decisions the only question is as to whether terms may be imposed, or of liability beyond payment of costs. The right is recognized *697
by the general condemnation statute, Sections 1793 and 1796, Revised Statutes 1919. Under Section 1793 it is provided that the costs up to and including the filing and copying of the report of the commissioners are to be paid by the appellant for condemnation, and costs of subsequent litigation are to be paid as the court in its discretion may deem just. This provision has reference to costs proper, those fixed by law, and has no reference to expenses incurred by the property owner for fees paid out to counsel, or other like expenses incurred in making his defense. [St. Louis v. Meintz,
There are cases wherein it was held or said that a municipal corporation, upon abandonment of a condemnation proceeding, became liable to the property owner for expenses so incurred. [St. Joseph v. Hamilton,
In Simpson v. Kansas City,
"We think that unless defendant can show that this long delay was unavoidable, and that reasonable diligence was used in the prosecution of the proceedings in the appellate court, then plaintiffs should receive compensation for their damages. We think the long, unexplained and wrongful delay charged, and the final dismissal of the proceedings, with the alleged injuries, make a prima-facie case, and the demurrer should be overruled."
On the road to the conclusion so stated the court passed upon certain matters which are pertinent in this inquiry. There was a provision of the charter of the city, the effect of which was to give the city sixty days, after the making of the report of assessment of damages, in which to determine whether it would go forward or not. It was said, at page 243: "The authorities directing such improvements should have, and in the absence of statutory provisions are generally held to have, discretion to accept or reject the property at the price fixed. `This rule is a necessity in view of the rational conduct of affairs.'" The distinction between damages and costs and expenses was recognized. It was held that a municipal corporation was not liable to the property owner for "damages inflicted by needlessly commencing and prosecuting proceedings — and which was afterwards abandoned." What was said to the contrary in Leisse v. Railroad was disapproved. It was said, at page 246:
"Every owner of real estate, especially in a town or city, holds his title thereto subject to the right of the public to appropriate it, in case of necessity, to public uses, the appropriation to be enforced, if legal force is necessary, according to the charters and laws governing that subject. This inconvenience and damage is incident to the ownership of property. A proceeding in conformity to the charter and the laws of the land would not be wrongful, and would not subject the corporation to damages, though subsequently abandoned. The right to *699 discontinue might not be granted by the court except upon equitable terms as the payment of costs and expenses. [Railroad v. Lackland, supra; City of St. Louis v. Meintz, supra.] We are not willing to strictly apply the rule declared in the Leisse Case, supra, to a city having the charter rights of this defendant."
Under the provisions of Section 1793 of the general condemnation statute payment of the amount assessed for taking the property must be made upon the filing of the report, and the corporation seeking to condemn, if it desires to abandon "the appropriation of any parcel of land," must so elect by an instrument of writing to that effect, to be filed with the clerk of the court wherein the proceeding is pending, within ten days from the return of the assessment of damages, otherwise payment may be enforced by execution. Without doubt, under this provision, a school district may abandon its purpose to condemn, and thereupon the assessment of damages would become void. The express right to abandon at this stage of the proceeding, as for an assessment deemed unreasonably large, implies the right to discontinue or abandon at an earlier stage. In either case the costs would go as provided by statute, and according to the control by the court over costs incurred in proceedings had before it. But the question whether "the right to discontinue might not be granted by the court except upon equitable terms as the payment — of expenses," meaning thereby counsel fees, and the like, is a materially different thing. Upon that there is not any provision of statutory law. It may be observed that in the leading case in this State, North Missouri Railroad Co. v. Lackland,
There are some other cases to be noticed. In Brewing Assn. v. St. Louis,
"Accordingly, upon a comparison of the statute upon which the proceeding in St. Louis Railroad v. Southern Railroad,
In Lester Real Estate Co. v. St. Louis,
In Nauman v. Big Tarkio Drainage District,
The question at the root of the instant case is, whether the Legislature, in referring the school district to the general condemnation law for its manner of procedure, in undertaking to condemn a site for school purposes, must be held to have intended thereby to impose upon the school district the same liability to the landowner which a railroad corporation would incur, should the proceeding be discontinued. Section 11428, Revised Statutes 1919, authorizes the school district to proceed "in the same manner" as does the railroad or other like corporation, but, obviously different results may follow. The railroad corporation by condemnation of land for its tracks, secures only an easement for the use of the land. The fee remains in the owner. [Sec. 1793, R.S. 1919; St. Louis, K. N. Ry. Co. v. Clark,
In the Lackland Case the court had under consideration not a general condemnation statute, but the special act constituting the charter of the North Missouri Railroad Company, with the provisions therein contained concerning condemnation proceedings to be taken by that company. In St. Louis Ry. Co. v. Southern Co., 138 Mo. l.c. 596, this court said: "Was the question of the recovery of such expenses on dismissal of condemnation proceedings a new one in this State, we might hesitate in sustaining this action. But this court forty years ago held that in the discontinuance of proceedings to condemn land for the use of a railroad, the landowner was entitled to payment by the company of all the costs of the case, including counsel fees."
The school district does not exist for any private gain or purpose, but wholly for public and beneficent purposes. The right of Kansas City, in the Simpson Case, and of St. Louis in the Brewing Assn. Case, as municipalities through provisions of their charters, to dismiss condemnation proceedings upon payment of costs, and without liability for expenses or counsel fees incurred, was sustained. No statute forbade it. No statute forbids the school district from dismissing. The question of dismissing the proceeding to condemn a particular parcel of land for a site must be determined by the members of the board of directors, as public officials, and as in the public interest. In the absence of any statute imposing liability upon the school district for their act of discontinuance, it should not readily be held that the school statute, Section 11428, which authorizes the district to condemn a site and points out Article II of Chapter 13 as prescribing the manner or mode of procedure to be followed, must be construed as meaning that the school district by discontinuing its proceeding to condemn, incurs the same liability as it has been held the private corporations therein designated, incur by a discontinuance. *705
In respect of manner of procedure, Section 11428 was a reference statute. "Reference statutes are of frequent use to avoid encumbering the statute books by unnecessary repetition." [State v. Peyton,
The petition does not charge that the proceeding was needlessly brought, or vexatiously and unnecessarily prolonged. A recovery is not sought on those grounds, but it is alleged that through protests of members of the board of education and of others procured to protest, the commissioners failed to make any report, and that the proceeding was dismissed without notice to appellant, and it is alleged, upon information and belief, that if the commissioners had made their report, and done so unaffected by protest or outside persuasion, the appellant would have been allowed the sum of $100,000 as the amount of its damages. But the court could not have taxed these expenses, but only costs against the school district in that proceeding, under the decision in St. Louis v. Meintz,
School districts as quasi-corporations are created for a specific purpose — the promotion of education among the children of school age within the district. They are local agents of the State for that purpose. Their power to levy taxes is limited; the funds thereby derived are devoted *706
to specific uses toward the common end; and it is the announced policy of the State that they be jealously guarded. The power of school districts to contract, or to incur liability, is limited, and is controlled by statute, and must be shown to arise out of authority granted expressly, or by necessary implication. [35 Cyc. 949-951; Cochran v. Wilson,
"In the Lackland Case, it is true, mention is made of the statute which provides that the court shall adjudge the `costs of the proceeding according to equity'; but it is evident that this court imposed the terms of paying counsel fees, not because of the statute, but independent of it." The liability here claimed ought not to be held to exist independent of any statute, or, at most upon a construction so doubtful in character.
The judgment of the circuit court should be affirmed. Small,C., concurs.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion of LINDSAY, C., is hereby adopted as the opinion of the court. Woodson, James T. Blair and Ragland,JJ., concur; Graves, J., dissents.
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