126 Va. 407 | Va. | 1919
delivered the opinion of the court.
The school board of the city of Harrisonburg applied! to the Circuit Court of Rockingham county to condemn “for its purposes,” a lot in the city of Harrisonburg belonging to Mollie A. P. Alexander, containing 1.74 acres.. The owner demurred to the petition and also answered it,, denying the right of the school board to condemn the property because it contained more than one acre, and also because the property was residence property, and it was proposed to condemn her residence and yard and garden. The-circuit court sustained the demurrer and refused to appoint the commissioners, and to that judgment, this writ, of error was awarded.
Prior to 1903, we had no general statute on the subject of eminent domain, but the power was exercised under separate statutes which regulated and defined the powers to be exercised by the different agencies upon which the power was conferred. For example, the powers of the University and of the Military Institute, respectively, are to be found in sections 1546 and 1585, respectively, of the Code of 1887 (Code 1904, pp. 826, 834). The powers of corporations are found in chapter 46 of the Code of 1887 under the title of “Corporations Generally.” But the legislature of 1902-3-4 enacted a chapter (608) under the distinctive title of eminent domain (hereinbefore referred to as chapter 46B) the provisions of which are taken mainly from chapter 46 of the Code of 1887. It added, however, some new provisions, among them, clause 25 which reads as follows: “If the court, or the board of supervisors, of any county, the council of any city or town, the trustees of any" school district, the institution for the deaf and blind, and of the State hospitals, the University of Vir
In S. & W. Ry. Co. v. Commonwealth, supra, it is said, “It is a settled rule of construction that all statutes in pari materia should be read and construed together as if they formed parts of the same statute and were enacted at the same time, and where there is a discrepancy or disagreement between them such interpretation should be given as that all if possible may stand together. Dillard v. Thornton, 29 Gratt. (70 Va.) 392, 396. In that case it is said that the rule applies with peculiar force in the construction of a Code to the several parts thereof which relate to the same subject matter, were conceived by the same minds, prepared by the same hands, and adopted at the same time by the same legislative body. Easley v. Barksdale, 75 Va. 281; Bank v. Holland, 99 Va. 495, 505, 39 S. E. 126, 86 Am. St. Rep. 898, 55 L. R. A. 155.”
If the contention of the school board be correct that there are no restrictions on city school trustees, then there are none on trustees of schools for towns and counties, for clause 25 of section 1105f applies to all alike, and the effect would be a nullification of sections 1488, 1522 and 1538 which cannot be, but the latter sections must be held
It is insisted by counsel for the school, board that the amendment of clause 25 of section 1105f by the Acts of 1912, page 214, renders that clause inconsistent with section 1488 and repeals it by implication in so far as it relates to such restrictions, and he emphasizes the word “any” in the sentence describing the property which may be condemned as “any land, buildings, etc.,” as though that word were not previously in the section, but the amendment made no such change. The Acts of 1902-3-4 describes the property which may be taken as “any land, building, etc.,” and the only change made by the amendment of 1912 was to strike out the words “building, structures,” and substitute in lieu thereof the words in parentheses In the following sentence taken from the amendment “any land (which land shall include any dwelling house, buildings, structures thereon) etc.”
We are of opinion that the school board of the city of Harrisonburg has no right to have condemned for its purposes a dwelling, or yard, garden or orchard, regardless of the quantity of land to be taken, and for that reason the judgment of the circuit court of Rockingham county should be affirmed.
Affirmed.