39 Cal. 582 | Cal. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the Court,. Rhodes, C. J., Sprague, J., and Wallace, J., concurring;
In 1865, the Western Pacific Railroad Company instituted proceedings in the District Court for Santa Clara County, under the provisions of the Railroad Law, to condemn certain lands of the plaintiff. On the 27th day of November, A. D. 1865, the Commissioners who had been appointed for that purpose, filed their report, awarding the plaintiff $3,000 as the damage sustained by him. This report was confirmed February 16, 1866, and from the order or judgment confirming it, an appeal was taken to this Court, by the railroad company, and the order was affirmed July 11, 1868. On the 8th of September, A. D. 1868, the company paid to plaintiff the sum of $3,000, but refused to pay any further sum as
The right of the plaintiff to recover, depends upon the question whether the report of the Commissioners, or the order of the Court confirming the report, is a judgment.
This is no longer an open question in this State. In the case of the Sacramento, Placer and Nevada Railroad Company v. Harlan (24 Cal. 334), objection was made to the juristion of the Court to review the proceedings on writ of error, and that the review could only be had by appeal, and the Court held that the order confirming the report of the Commissioners is a, final judgment, within the meaning of the three hundred and forty-seventh section of the Practice Act, which provides for an appeal from a final judgment rendered in an action or special proceeding in the District Court; and, in accordance with this decision, the order confirming the report of the Commissioners in this very proceeding against plaintiff, was reviewed by this Court, on appeal.
Nor do we think this necessarily depends upon the question whether the award and judgment are binding upon the company, so as to compel them to take the land and pay the award; and upon the point whether it would have this effect, we eispress no opinion. “A judgment is the final determination of the rights of parties in the action or proceeding.” (Sec. 144, Prac. Act.)
In Bell v. Davis (1 Cal. 137), it is said that every definitive sentence or decision by which the merits of a cause are determined, although not technically a judgment, or the proceeding, are not capable of being enrolled, is a judgment. In this case, as was said in Sacramento, P. and N. R. R. Co. v. Harlan, (supra,) the rights of the parties, and the conditions upon wdiich petitioners could acquire the land, and the amount which the plaintiff was entitled to receive, was finally adjudged by the definitive sentence or decision of the Court, and there can be no doubt that the liability of the company to pay the amount of the award, became absolute, upon their appropriation of the land. .
By Section 36 of the Act concerning railroads, it is pro-
Order and judgment reversed, and the Court directed to overrule the demurrer.
Crockett, J., expressed no opinion,.