Plumer v. Wausau Boom Co.

49 Wis. 449 | Wis. | 1880

The following opinion was filed March 30, 1880:

Orton, J.

"Walter D. McIndoe, Bradbury G. Plumer and John C. Clark were the joint owners of certain booms and piers in the Wisconsin river, near the city of Wausau, in the following proportions, viz.: Mclndoe owned three-ninths, Plumer four-ninths, and Clark two-ninths. Desiring to operate their works to better advantage, and with enlarged powers, they procured the passage of chapter 45 of the Private and Local Laws of 1871, incorporating the company, of which *454they were to be the principal stockholders. Section 20 of said chapter empowered the corporation to take possession of said booms and piers, “ and any lauds adjacent to said river,” provided the company should pay to such owners of the booms and piers, and in such proportion, and to the owners of such land, reasonable compensation therefor, when the amount should be ascertained as provided in section 21. This last section provides for the appointment of appraisers to value said property, by the judge of the circuit court of Marathon county, upon the application of the company or any of the parties interested. Upon the application of B. G. Plumer, the respondent, and upon proper notice, the lion. George W. Cate, judge of said court, on the 18th day of September, 1871, appointed. Joseph Desert, Benjamin Single and William P. Kelley such appraisers.

On the 22d day of August, 1872, Mplndoe died, and the lions. G. L. Park and James O. Raymond were appointed his executors; but before he died (and at what exact time is not stated in the record), he sold his interest in the booms and piers to one Alexander Stewart. It is admitted in the brief of the appellant’s counsel, that at the time the notice was given and the order made for the appointment of the appraisers, “Mclndoe was alive, owned and was in possession of the property..” After considerable delay in making the appraisement, and on the 30th day of December, 1872, a written stipulation was made and signed by the president and secretary of the company, by Park and Raymond, the executors of Mclndoe, deceased, and by John C. Clark and the respondent, Plumer, which authorized and directed said appraisers to proceed and “appraise the property and award the damages,” “on this 30th day of December, 1872, without further or other notice,” and which wraived “all notice, technicalities and informalities.” On the same day the appraisers took and subscribed the proper oath to “ faithfully and impartially make the appraisement; ” and on the first day of January, 1873, by *455a stipulation signed by the president and secretary of tbe company, by Park and Raymond per one Walter Alexander, and by Clark and Phmer, a basis was agreed upon, upon which the appraisers were directed to appraise the property; and on the same day, Clark, as president of the company and for himself, Raymond, one of the executors of McIndoe, and the respondent, Plumer, together with the appraisers, “visited and viewed the piers and booms to be appraised.”

On the 11th day of January, 1873, the appraisers made their award in writing, by which they awarded to the estate of McIndoe $9,210.96 6-9, to Bradbury G. Plumer $12,281.28 8-9, to John C. Clark $6,140.64 4-9, as their just proportion of damages by reason of the taking of said property by the company. The appraisers filed with the clerk of said court the original appraisement or award, and delivered a copy thereof to the secretary of the company. The respondent, Plumer, demanded of the company the payment of his portion of the. award, and offered to convey to the company his interest in the property upon receipt of the money, and the company refused. The respondent then commenced this suit upon the award, for his part of the damages, and recovered judgment therefor.

On this appeal the only question is of the validity of the award. On this main question it is objected, first, that Stewart, the purchaser of the interest of Mclndoe in the property, had ho notice of the proceedings subsequently had, and did not sign any of the stipulations waiving such notice, and is not therefore bound by the award; and, if he is not bound, that the award is void.

Stewart bought an interest in the property pending the proceedings to condemn the property and assess the damages, and he took such interest cum onere and subject to any award which might legally be made. The appointment of appraisers, with proper notice to all parties then interested, was the commencement of proceedings quasi judicial, and in analogy to *456other judicial proceedings, in which notice to the parties then interested in the property is jurisdictional, and when such notice is given, the subsequent and final proceedings, without further notice to any intervening purchaser, will bind, not only the parties notified, but their privies also, who purchase an interest in the property pendente lite. Adams et al. v. Filer, 7 Wis., 306; Whitney et al. v. Brunette, 15 Wis., 61. When jurisdiction has once attached by notice to the proper parties at the time, a failure to give notice of subsequent proceedings will not invalidate them., Mills on Em. Dom., § 95.

It may also be said, in answer to this objection, that the company waived all possible objection on the ground that the proper parties did not visit and view the property with the appraisers, and did not sign the stipulations which resulted in the appraisement at the time when it was made. The company are presumed to have known who the proper parties were with which to act in the matter, and in acting with those who signed with the company the stipulations and waivers, without objection, it is. now too late to make such objection to defeat the award which their own conduct contributed so materially to produce. Generally, no one can take advantage of the want of notice of any proceeding except the party himself. Here the company does not complain that it had not sufficient notice, and joined in a stipulation to waive “ other and further notice ” to anybody.

It is an important question, but one which we do not decide in this case, whether Stewart, who purchased an interest in the property pending these proceedings to condemn it and assess the damages, is entitled, by virtue of a conveyance of the property, to the damages assessed, and whether such damages would not belong to the estate of Mclndoe as personal property.

Second. It is objected that Park and Rajunond did not sign one of the stipulations as executors or otherwise, but their names appear to have been signed by one Walter Alexander. This stipulation was signed on the same day, and *457soon after Raymond, as one of the executors of Mclndoe, together with the appraisers and the other parties interested, “visited and viewed the piers and booms to be appraised,” and by this act alone waived all objections to the manner or time of the appraisement; and it becomes quite immaterial whether Alexander had authority to sign these names or not.'

Third. It is objected that the award does not embrace the value of lands belonging to the former owners of the piers and booms which were “adjacent to said river.” It seems that the three owners of the piers and booms each separately owned an island in the river near the worts, and that the piers and booms may to some extent have been connected with or attached to the shore lines of these islands. If so, then the appraisement would embrace such a use of the islands in connection with the piers and booms. Rut it cannot, certainly, be contended that the whole of this separate property of the owners and the piers and booms could be placed and appraised together as both joint and separate property. We think this objection arises from a wrong construction of the language of the charter. Section 20 provides for the taking of an appraisement of two classes of property. One class consists of the rights and joint interests of the former owners of the piers and booms in those improvements, just as they are. The other class embraces “ any lands adjacent to the river,” by whomsoever owned, and found necessary for the use of the improvement, and this class would include these lands owned separately by the parties.

Fourth. It is objected that the charter requires that “ duplicate certificates of such appraisement, signed by them,” shall be made, “ one filed with the clerk and the other with the secretary of the company,” and this was not done. This requirement is merely directory, and if not strictly followed certainly would not affect the validity of the award. Just what the language of the charter means in this respect is not readily seen. A certificate of the appraisement would not *458strictly be a certified copy of the appraisement, and a “ duplicate certificate” would not be strictly a duplicate of the award. The appraisers filed their original award, with all other papers in the proceedings, with the clerk of the court, and filed a certified copy of it with the secretary of the company. This was certainly a substantial compliance with the requirement, and, if anything, an improvement, so far as the authentication of the award is concerned.

We are unable to find any valid objections to the award. All the parties interested appear to have joined together to expedite and consummate the appraisement, upon the proper basis and at the proper time, and none of the parties or privies appeared to make any objection to it at the time, or to the manner in which it had been filed. But when demand is made upon the company, they, for the first -time, object to its validity, not because the company had not ample notice, and had not waived all technicalities and formalities,” but because some other party had not such notice, when such party makes no objection to the award on that ground.

The company has long been in the undisputed use of.the property, and there is no good reason shown in this case why it should not pay this award of damages to the former owners of it.

By the Gov/rt.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed, with costs.

A motion for a reheai’ing was denied on the 27th day of May, 1880.

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