278 Mo. 85 | Mo. | 1919
On December 12, 1918, the city of Kansas City passed an ordinance to condemn certain lands, rights-of-way, and a steel, iron and concrete via
Provision has been made in Kansas City, Kansas, to acquire that portion of the land, rights-of-way and viaduct thereon lying in the State of Kansas for use as a public street and trafficway.
In the present proceeding Kansas City, Missouri, is seeking to acquire that portion of the viaduct and property on which it is located, which lies in the State of Missouri, for use as a public street and trafficway, so that by the two proceedings in the two states a free public highway shall exist between the two cities.
The property and structure sought to be appropriated cost about three millions of dollars. It could not be duplicated to-day for less than about four millions. The two cities and the property owners have carried on negotiations for converting it into a public trafficway, which culminated in October, 1918, in a proposal by the owners of the property to sell it to the two cities for $1,775,900, fifty-six per cent of which was to be paid by Kansas City, Missouri, and forty-four per cent to be paid by Kansas City, Kansas. Thereafter to achieve public intercommunication between the two cities by the appropriation of this viaduct, an ordinance. authorizing its condemnation was enacted by Kansas City, Missouri, and filed as the basis of that proceeding in Division Number Four of the Circuit Court of Jackson County, .Missouri. The machinery of that court being thus set in motion (Kansas City v. Smith, 238 Mo. 1. c. 330), certain persons owning property in the benefit district fixed by the ordinance moved .to dismiss the proceeding, upon the overruling of which the present application was filed by them to prohibit the said court from further proceedings for alleged lack of jurisdiction.'
The answer further alleges that the property sought to he condemned is owned by a viaduct company, under a franchise running for thirty years,- that said company filed in the circuit court its answer and waiver of right to remove the viaduct and improvements located on the lands sought to be condemned for a public street and trafficway by the ordinance filed in that court, and consenting that the property might he condemned by Kansas City, Missouri, as prescribed in its ordinance upon payment of just compensation. The answer further avers:
“5. That the power of ominent domain possessed by Kansas City and the various provisions of its charter relating to such matters, and the laws of Missouri give to said city full and complete power to condemn the property in question as and for a public street and highway; that Division No. Four of the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri, at Kansas City, has jurisdiction of the parties and the subject-matter in said proceedings and has full power, authority and jurisdiction, under the charter of Kansas City, and the Laws of this State, to proceed to try and determine the matters and things in said cause, and that said court has full power, authority and jurisdiction to impanel a jury of six disinterested freeholders of Kansas City, as it did on the 25th day of January, 1919, in- said proceeding, for the*93 purpose of ascertaining and determining the damages and benefits, and has full power and jurisdiction to hear evidence in said cause and proceed to award damages and assess benefits as proposed and contemplated therein against the property defined in said proceeding; that the city not only possesses the power to condemn and appropriate for public use a private viaduct already constructed, but that it has power, in said proceeding, to levy and assess the cost thereof upon the various tracts and parcels of land in the benefit district described and set forth in said Ordinance No. 35,965. That said structure as it now stands is not a public highway, but a private highway, owned and operated by private parties, for which they charge a toll to whoever uses it; that said structure is suitable and usable as a public highway, connecting as it does with a public street in Kansas City, Missouri, and with a public street in Kansas City, Kansas, and if acquired by the two cities, as contemplated, it will be the main public thoroughfare and highway between said cities, which can and will be used by the public as a public street and thoroughfare by pedestrians and all kinds of vehicles, between the two cities.
“The rentals from the use of said viaduct by the street car company will not go into the general funds of the city, but that the same will go into a special trust fund for the purpose of repairing, keeping in repair and the reconstructing of the viaduct whenever needed, as shown by copy of Ordinance No. 35,267 of Kansas City, Missouri, authorizing such contract; a copy of said ordinance is hereto attached and marked Exhibit No. 2 and made a part hereof; á copy of said contract is hereto attached and marked Exhibit No. 3 and made a part hereof.
“Defendants deny that Kansas City, Missouri, has entered into a contract with the owners of the viaduct for the purchase thereof, at a stipulated figure, which in any way could possibly bind the court or jury in determining the true value of said property and the just*94 compensation to be paid therefor, and that all that Exhibit D, attached to plaintiff’s application, amounts to is a mere proposal only on behalf of the owners of the property, to take so much for it, if paid within a certain time and upon certain terms. The amount so. fixed in said written option or proposal amounts merely to an offer to sell the property for that amount, and does not necessarily, and cannot under the Kansas City Charter, and the law, bind the court or jury in fixing the amount of compensation to be paid for said property, in said proceedings sought to be condemned.
“Defendants further answering, deny the alleged legal effect of each, all and every statement, allegation and averment in said application made or contained.
“Wherefore, defendants having fully answered, pray that a writ of prohibition herein be denied and plaintiff’s application and petition be dismissed.”
On the filing of. this answer, the applicants for prohibition in this court moved for a judgment thereon and that the temporary writ of prohibition be made absolute.
Powers of a municipal corporation are derived from its charter and consist (1) of express grants, (2) powers necessarily or farily implied in or incident to those expressly granted, and (3) powers essential to accomplish objects for which the municipal corpora
Our conclusion is that the present proceeding in the circuit court will work no injury to the owners of property in the benefit district, and that it is within the implied and incidental powers granted in the charter of Kansas City.
“Every species of property which the public needs may require and which government cannot lawfully appropriate, under any other right, is subject to be seized and appropriated under the right of eminent domain. Lands for public ways, timber, stone and gravel with which to make or improve the public ways; buildings standing in the way of contemplated improvements, or which for any other reason it becomes necessary to take, remove or destroy for the public good; streams of water; corporate franchises; and generally, it may be said, legal and equitable rights of every description, are liable to be thus appropiated.” [Cooley, Const. Limit. (3 Ed.) see. 526; Christy’s Admr. v. St. Louis, 20 Mo. 143; Lewis Eminent Domain (3 Ed.), sec. 412; Cooley, Const. Limit. (5 Ed.) p. 341.]
A careful consideration of the terms of the ordinance satisfies us that they are reasonably certain in intent and import and susceptible of practical enforcement.
III. The learned counsel for the property owners in the benefit district (who are not parties to the record and who appeared by permission) concedes the right of the city to acquire the existing viaduct by condemnation proceedings under its charter and “to impose special assessments to pay for it,” the only contention made on th'eir behalf being that the trial court should order an assessment of the property in pursuance of the provisions of -Section 28 of Article VIII of the Charter of Kansas City.. The present application being one for prohibition lies only for want or excess of jurisdiction on the part of the trial court. Any errors of law which it might make or which might occur in its rulings in the course of the proceedings sought to be prohibited, are not correctible by a writ of prohibition, but could only be reviewed on appeal or writ of error. It is not the province of this court, in an application like the present, to indicate tp the trial court in advance what steps it should take, in the exercise of the jurisdiction rightfully lodged in it, to conduct a condemnation proceeding on the part of the city to enforce the ordinance originating it. We have held that it has jurisdiction so to do, under the provisions of the charter of Kansas City. In the exercise of that jurisdiction the trial court is free to exercise its own judg
It necessarily results that the preliminary writ of prohibition granted in this case must he quashed. It is so ordered.