17 Kan. 239 | Kan. | 1876
The opinion of. the court was delivered by
This was a proceeding for the condemnation of a certain strip of land for railroad purposes. It seems that formerly A. G. DaLee owned the N.E. J of the S.W. J of section 1, township 13, range 19, in Douglas county. The tract contained forty acres. DaLee sold said land to A. M. Wilder for $2,400, receiving $400 down, and was to receive $2,000 more on long time. No deed has yet been executed for'the land, but D^Lee gave to Wilder a title bond for a deed. Said $2,000 has not yet been paid, nor any part thereof, nor is it yet due. The land is fenced, but has no residence upon it, and it is not used for any purpose. After the sale from DaLee to Wilder, the St. Louis, Lawrence & Denver Railroad Company procured by condemnation proceedings a strip of said land for railroad purposes. Said strip contains three-fourths of an acre of said land, and so divides the forty acres as to leave 3.56 acres on one side, and 35.69 acres on the other side. The commissioners who assessed.the damages in the condemnation proceedings assessed the total damages to the owner or owners of this forty-acre tract of land at $246.25. Wilder then appealed, or attempted to appeal, to the district court. We shall say more concerning this appeal hereafter.
“The errors relied on as grounds,of reversal are these: 1st, Overruling the motion to dismiss the appeal. 2d, Overruling the demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence. 3d, Rendition of the judgment. The first two having been also submitted, ■and disregarded, on motion for a new trial. Our points are — 1st, That the appeal was not taken in time. 2d, That it was defective for want of a copy of the plat showing the land taken. ' 3d, That it was also defective for want of justification of the surety to the appeal bond. 4th, That the petition .and answer formed a new action of trespass, and were not proceedings under the appeal. 5th, That in any case the damages were excessive, both because founded on a speculative basis of value, and also because they gave Wilder the value of the unincumbered fee of the land, which it is admitted he did not possess. 6th, That the j udgment is erroneous, being inapplicable to an appeal, and giving no appellate redress of any sort.”
I. In answer to the first point, Wilder, the defendant in ■error, says in his brief: “The first point made by plaintiff in error is, that the appeal was not taken in-time. This objection is now heard here for the first time. In the court below the party moved to dismiss the appeal, but did not mention this ground. He did not raise the objection during the trial; did not mention it in his motion for a new trial; and has not .alleged it in his petition in error, but keeps it back, and first starts it in his brief.” In reply to this, plaintiff in error says: “This objection, so far .from being made for the first time, is properly preserved on the motion to dismiss.” There seem to be four- questions concerning the appeal which the
II. It is claimed that the surety on the appeal bond did
III. It is also claimed, “that the certified copy of the proceedings of the commissioners was not delivered or transmitted to the clerk of the district court within twenty days from the rendition of the report.” Now if this is true it was the fault of the county clerk, and not the fault of the defendant in error. The appeal was perfected when the undertaking was given; (Laws of 1870, p. 184, §7.) And it was then the duty of the county clerk, and not the duty of the defendant in error, to transmit a copy of the proceedings to the clerk of the district court; (Laws of 1870, p. 184, §7, and pp. 155,156, §§ 1 and 2;) and such laches on the part of the county clerk is no ground for a dismissal of the appeal.
Y. In thus disposing of the objections to the appeal, we have disposed of the first, second and third points made in the brief of plaintiff in error. The fourth point made in the brief, is, “ that the petition and answer formed a new action of trespass, and were not proceedings under the appeal.” It is true that there is much irrelevant matter contained in both the petition and the answer; but still we do not perceive from them that either party intended to wholly abandon the appeal, and to litigate an entirely new action of trespass. Neither do the subsequent proceedings’ show any such thing. On the contrary, we think the action was prosecuted throughout and decided as a condemnation proceeding, and as an appeal from the appraisement commissioners, except said irrelevant matter contained in the pleadings, and an irregularity in the judgment which will be hereafter mentioned.
YI. The fifth point in plaintiff’s brief is, “that in any case the damages were excessive, both because founded on a speculative basis of value, and also because they gave.Wilder the value of the unincumbered fee of the land, which it is admitted he did not possess.” First: Did the court below give to Wilder speculative damages, such as are not authorized by law? Possibly the court did; but we do not think that the record of the case sufficiently shows it. The overruling of the demurrer of the railroad company to the evidence introduced by Wilder, does not show it; for that
VII. As to the sixth point in the brief: The judgment in
The case will be remanded to the court below, with the order that the judgment be modified in accordance with the-views expressed in this opinion.-