175 Iowa 576 | Iowa | 1916
In sustaining the defendant’s motion to enter an order setting aside the assessment of damages suffered by the owner from the appropriation of his property for cemetery purposes, the court directed that “the incorporated town of Earlham might proceed with condemnation proceedings with the commissioners heretofore appointed,” after first giving notice to such owner. Of this, plaintiff complains in the first case, for that, as is said, the commissioners, having previously inspected and assessed the property, were biased and prej-' udiced, and thereby rendered incompetent to serve. Subsequently, the sheriff designated five of said commissioners, with
In the second case, the landowner sought to test, by proceedings in certiorari, the legality of appointment and service of said commissioners, for that, as is alleged, they were biased and prejudiced by having served thrice previously in the inspection and assessment of damages to the owner by the appropriation of the same parcel of land, and thereby became so biased and prejudiced as to render them incompetent to serve as commissioners. The decision, in each ease, depends on whether previous service of commissioners in assessing the damages consequent on appropriating the same premises, and the bias and prejudice resulting, render them incompetent to act as such, in the inspection and assessment of such damages in subsequent proceedings to condemn. The motion to dismiss the petition in the last case was on the grounds that the facts, as stated, did not entitle petitioner to the issuance of a writ of certiorari, and that, by appeal, plaintiff was afforded a plain, speedy and adequate remedy at law.
The city, upon payment of the damages, may take the property.
“Section 2000. The freeholders appointed shall be the commissioners to assess all damages to the owners of real estate in said county, and said corporation, or the owner of any land therein, may, at any time after their appointment, have the damages assessed in the manner herein prescribed, by giving the other party ten days’ notice thereof in writing, if a resident of this state, specifying therein the day and hour when such commissioners will view the premises, which shall be served in the same manner as original notices.”
The only qualifications prescribed by statute, then, are that the commissioners shall be freeholders of the municipality and not interested in the same or a like question; and by designating these, it would seem others are excluded by necessary implication. This is confirmed by the procedure prescribed. It is outside of court unless an appeal is taken to the
“This is a special tribunal, a sort of a pied pondré court, a neighbourhood fornm emanating entirely from the legislative will; its machinery and scope springing exclusively from the same munificent source. As such a tribunal for such purposes is not objectionable on constitutional grounds, we are bound to abide the legislative will on the subject and follow its lead.”
A person cannot, according to the scheme prescribed, be a commissioner unless he is a qualified freeholder of the municipality, not interested in the same or a like question. This is the sheriff’s guide in summoning them, and if he sees to it that they have these qualifications, he has performed his full duty in the matter of selection. All the decisions reaching a different conclusion construe statutes under which the court appoints the appraisers, and the hearing is before it, or the report is returned into court, and therefore in some manner under the guidance or supervision of a tribunal authorized to pass on objections to the qualifications of such appraisers. Detroit v. Heineman, 128 Mich. 537; Folmar v. Folmar, 68 Ala. 120; Hunter v. Matthews, 12 Leigh (Va.) 228. The remedy, in event of any injustice in fixing the damages, is by appeal to the district court, where full hearing before an impartial jury is assured. On the ground that bias or prejudice, to be inferred from previous service as a commissioner, did not vitiate the proceedings, the petition was rightly