STATE EX REL. BRITTON ET AL., Relators, v. JERRY MULLOY, Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County
Division One
June 12, 1933
61 S. W. (2d) 741
1107
Daniel Bartlett, R. T. Brownrigg and Wm. L. Mason for relators.
It appears that when the mandate of this court was filed in the trial court, that court on January 6, 1932, continued the injunction case to April 18, 1932, ostensibly to give the defendant school district time and opportunity “to acquire the interest of plaintiffs and interveners in the property so appropriated” by having already erected school buildings thereon. Thereafter on April 14, 1932, the defendants filed in said court a motion or application praying the court “to set down for hearing and to determine the damages, if any, sustained by the plaintiffs and interveners from the appropriation of their property, if any, in said Cornell Avenue and Lots 1 and 2 of Block 2 of University Heights Subdivision, in view of the use to which said property so appropriated is to be devoted, and for such other orders and directions as to the court shall seem meet and proper in the premises.” The defendants recited in said application as the sole basis therefor the statement, which the court found to be true, that, “Your defendants respectfully represent and show to the court that they have undertaken to agree with the plaintiffs and interveners in an effort to acquire the interests, if any, of the plaintiffs and interveners in and to Lots 1 and 2 of Block 2 of University Heights Subdivision, and Cornell Avenue, upon which, during the year 1926, they erected certain buildings for school purposes; that your defendants have been unable to agree with the plaintiffs and interveners upon the price to be paid for such interests, if any, owned by said plaintiffs and interveners in and to the aforementioned property.” It seems that no proceeding in condemnation was instituted by the school district. The record further shows that the plaintiffs in the injunction suit (relators here) appeared and objected to the trial court proceeding to hear the application of defendants “to determine the damages, if any, sustained by plaintiffs and interveners” and thus converting the injunction proceeding into an inquiry and ascertainment of damages. Thereupon the trial court, over plaintiffs’ objections, made and entered its order as follows: “On the application of defendants filed herein on April 14, 1932, and on hearing of order to show cause, the said application of defendants is granted and the cause set down for June 6, 1932, for the purpose of trial and adjudication of damages by a jury, and the opinion of such jury to be taken by the court upon said issue.”
At this stage of the proceedings in the trial court the plaintiffs in the injunction suit (relators here) applied for and this court issued its preliminary rule in prohibition directed to respondent as judge of said circuit court, who has filed here his return to such preliminary rule. Without going into detail, we think it will be sufficient to say that the relators here (plaintiffs in the injunction proceeding in the
The plaintiffs in the injunction suit (relators here) are owners of lots in University Heights Subdivision. The defendant school district was proceeding to erect and use buildings and grounds in such subdivision for school purposes in violation of valid building restrictions excluding and prohibiting such use. It is the settled law of this State that where the deeds of conveyance impose valid restrictions on the lots within a given area, then each lot and the owner of same has an easement in each and all the other lots affected by the restrictions, which easement is a property right to be protected by injunction, at the owner‘s instance, restraining and preventing violations of the building restrictions. Such building restrictions and the rights arising therefrom are subordinate to the right of eminent domain and can be extinguished by condemnation proceedings. If that suit was between individuals, the plaintiffs would be entitled absolutely to the injunctive relief prayed for and damages could not be considered. But this defendant is clothed with the power of
It follows from what we have said that defendant school district was not following the manner provided by law in acquiring the interest of the plaintiffs in the property which it desired to use for school purposes, and the said circuit court was acting outside of and in excess of its jurisdiction in proceeding to assess plaintiffs’ damages and compel plaintiffs to accept same under defendant‘s so-called application to have the damages assessed as part of the injunction case. Nor was or is respondent complying with the opinion and mandate of this court in Britton v. School District, supra.
It therefore follows that our preliminary rule in prohibition should be made absolute, prohibiting the respondent as judge of the circuit court from proceeding further or exercising further jurisdiction in hearing and trying the defendant‘s application filed in the injunction case of Britton v. School District to have the court determine and assess the damages sustained by plaintiffs by reason of defendant‘s appropriation of their property interest in Cornell Avenue and Lots 1 and 2 of Block 2 of University Heights Subdivision. We are further asked to direct the said circuit court to at once grant the injunctive relief prayed for in the original petition for injunction, thus terminating that part of our mandate in Britton v. School District, supra, directing the trial court to give the defendant school district a reasonable time and opportunity to acquire the interests of plaintiffs and interveners in the property in question. This, however, is a proceeding in prohibition only and we will confine our mandate to granting that relief only. Even if we could do otherwise, we are not disposed to be harsh with the defendant school district. The opinion and mandate in Britton v. School District will remain in force and effect and the parties at interest, as well as the respondent judge, will proceed accordingly. It is so ordered. Ferguson and Hyde, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by STURGIS, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.
