133 S.E. 315 | W. Va. | 1926
In this statutory proceeding to condemn land for railroad purposes, the circuit court found that the applicant had lawful right to take the property described in its petition, and that the land proposed to be taken was necessary for the purposes set out in the petition; and appointed commissioners, pursuant to section 14 of chapter 42 of the Code, to ascertain according to law what would be just compensation for the land proposed to be taken. From this order certain of the land owners interested obtained the present writ of error. No further proceedings appear in the record.
In view of our decisions it becomes apparent that the writ of error will have to be dismissed as improvidently awarded.
The following cases hold that in a proceeding under the statute to condemn and take land for railroad purposes, an order adjudicating the rights of the applicant to take the land and appointing commissioners to ascertain what will be just compensation and damages to the land owner, is not a final order to which a writ of error will lie: Wheeling RailwayCompany v. Wheeling Steel Iron Company,
The writ will therefore be dismissed.
Writ of error dismissed.