148 Mich. 308 | Mich. | 1907
On a petition by the Pere Marquette Railroad Company to the probate court of Kent county to condemn certain lands an issue was made upon the answer of these respondents, the United States Gypsum Company, American Trust & Savings Bank, and German American Bank, that the proceeding was to condemn iands for a private, and not a public, purpose. A preliminary hearing was had and proofs taken upon tbi> issue. The probate judge found that the purpose for which the land was to be condemned was a private purpose, and made an order dismissing the petition. Petitioner then took an appeal from this order to the circuit court, under the general statute allowing appeals from probate court. Section 669, 1 Comp. Laws. The same issue was tried in the circuit court for Kent county upon' said appeal, and the circuit court made an order reversing the action of the probate court, and overruling all the objections of respondents and their motion contained in the answer to dismiss the petition, and ordered the case to proceed to a hearing in said circuit court, before a jury, on the merits. Respondents appeared in both courts specially upon the questions of the jurisdiction of said
Upon this preliminary motion the only question to be determined is whether the writ should issue. The policy of this court since the case of People v. Thompson, 108 Mich. 583, both in civil and criminal cases, has been to refuse to hear upon certiorari questions which may be raised upon -a final hearing before it, after a full hearing in the trial court, and this rule has been applied in condemnation proceedings, and will be adhered to when applicable. Upon this application, it appears that the circuit court obtained jurisdiction upon an appeal under the statute mentioned, which is not the appeal provided for in cases of condemnation of lands, and the right to such appeal is claimed upon the authority of Defoe v. Bay Circuit Judge, 116 Mich. 567. The entire case was not taken by this appeal to the circuit court. A question had been raised and an issue made before the probate court that the taking sought was for a private, and not a public, purpose. The probate court so held and dismissed the petition. From this order alone an appeal was taken, and the same issue was tried in the circuit court. It was a question of law to be found by the court upon the facts presented upon a preliminary hearing. The jurisdiction of the circuit court was invoked in its appellate capacity, and it could only affirm or reverse the order of the probate court, and, having reversed such order, the only authority it had under this statute regulating these appeals from probate court was to include in such order of reversal an order remitting the matter to the probate court for further proceedings. It is not questioned by any
Keeping in mind the distinction between the question of public purpose, which is one of law for the court, and the question of public necessity, which is one of fact for the jury, it is sufficient answer to say that the question raised on the appeal was a question of law heard and determined by an appellate court of competent jurisdiction, and whether respondents proceed and participate in the trial upon the merits, of whether they refuse to have anything further to do with such proceedings, if no review is had of the determination of the circuit court upon that question, it becomes the law of this case. If the order made had remitted the case to the probate court for further proceedings, and no writ of certiorari had been asked to review it, no one questions but that respondents would have been concluded by it. The same situation is presented by the order that was made, and the same reason
The writ should be granted.
If this court is to at all interfere in the matter at this time, I am of opinion that certiorari, and not mandamus, is the appropriate remedy.
I do not think that the remedy afforded by a review of the order condemning the lands of the gypsum company is adequate to redress the grievances complained of in this application. The statute (section 6248, 2 Comp. Laws) authorizes the railroad company, after it has recorded in the office of the register of deeds a certified copy of the order of condemnation and paid the compensation awarded, “to take possession of and use ” the land condemned. It is my understanding — and, if I am wrong in this, then my conclusion is wrong — that a review of the final order of condemnation will not affect the right of the railroad company to the possession above given. In other words, the railroad company may, pending the review of the final order in this court, take possession of and use the condemned .land. It follows that a determination then made by this court that the railroad company is taking the land' condemned for a private purpose will not be made until after the land has actually been taken and used and the rights of the landowner seriously interfered with. That remedy is, therefore, in my judgment, entirely inadequate.
I am of the opinion that the order of the probate court dismissing this proceeding was perhaps an appealable order under 1 Comp. Laws, § 669, as interpreted in the case of Defoe v. Bay Circuit Judge, 116 Mich. 568. I am also of the opinion that, if so, such appeal may not have authorized a trial of the case upon the merits in the circuit court, and that, after reaching the conclusion that the probate judge erred, he should have made an order reversing his decision and remanding the cause for further proceedings. Had he done so, that would have been a final order, and might perhaps have been reviewable here on certiorari.
He did not make such an order, but treated the cause as one removed to the circuit court and triable there de novo upon the merits. He made a determination of what counsel call a “preliminary question of law,” as to the proposed public use, upon new proof taken before him and directed the calling of a jury to try the merits, and I understand that the jury will be in court for the purpose on Monday, May 6th, to proceed in the case. So far from rendering what he understood to be a final order, he rendered only an interlocutory one, if it can be said to be even that. There is room for the suggestion that it was thought to be the mere passing on a question of fact in the process of the trial. But, whichever we may call it, it was interlocutory in its nature, and certiorari does not lie in such a case. See the following Michigan cases:
In view, however, of the fact that the law is said to permit the taking of immediate possession of condemned land on payment, and pending an appeal, and the showing that serious and irreparable injury would result, it is possible that relief can be afforded by mandamus, although the cases are exceptional where such writ can be used to review interlocutory orders. I therefore suggest and consent to an order to show cause (reserving, however, the question of the propriety of such writ), thinking that the proceedings had before the circuit court may be treated as equivalent to a motion to vacate the order and a denial thereof. A stay of proceedings should accompany the order to show cause.