84 Mo. 248 | Mo. | 1884
The City of Kansas instituted proceedings to condemn, for street purposes, a .parcel of land in Kansas City, in which Elma J. Hill, Geo. D. Huling, Thomas H. Swope and others were parties, some as owners of the strip of laud which it was proposed to condemn, others of lots to be assessed for benefits. After a verdict and other proper steps, before the mayor, the whole proceeding was taken by appeal to the circuit court of Jackson county, where there was another trial and a verdict in which separate assessments were made and a judgment rendered according to section three of the charter. The damages assessed aggregated $28,000.06, and one dollar was assessed against the city for benefit, and the balance $27,999.06, against ninety-three separate lots, or parcels of land owned by individuals. One owned by Geo. D. Huling was assessed $3,025.46. Six owned by Thomas Swope, in the aggregate $8,000, and two owned by John W. Reed $9,400, and two owned'by J. Brumbach two hundred and eighty dollars. The assessment against the ninety-three lots varied from ten cents to $4,800. Huling and Swope each appealed to this court, which reversed the judgment and remanded the cause, and the question now for determination is, whether there shall be a re-trial, only as to the assessments against Huling and Swope, or the trial shall again be de novo f
Section three, article seven of the charter (Laws 1875,
Section six provides for an appeal by the city, or any party aggrieved to the circuit court of Jackson county, which thereupon becomes possessed of the cause and tries it de novo, and the judgment is that the city have and hold the property sought to be taken, etc., and pay therefor the amount assessed against it, and that the several lots of private property assessed to pay compensation by the verdict, stand charged and be bound respectively for the assessment, with interest, etc.
If one of a hundred property holders appeal, however well satisfied with the verdict the other ninety -nine may be, the entire cause, by that appeal, is taken to the circuit court. It is but one cause, although in the proceeding each of a hundred parties has a distinct assessment for the compensation he may be entitled to, or the charge for benefits for which his property is liable. There is but one jury, one verdict, and one judgment. That judgment ascertains and determines the compensation to be paid to each person whose property is taken, and the amount of charge against each lot, or parcel for benefit received, but it is nevertheless only one judgment. An appeal from the circuit to the Supreme Court brings up the same cause that was tried in the circuit court, and a reversal of the judgment is a reversal of it as an entirety. If it were otherwise, and the party or parties less than the whole number interested should obtain a reversal of so
If, on the other hand, on a re-trial the damages assessed to the appellant for taking his property, or the assessment against it for benefits, should be less than were allowed in the circuit court, the result would be to take from other property holders an amount in excess of that required to pay for the condemned property. It was evidently for this reason that, in the charter, provision was made for a trial de novo, on appeal to the circuit court. If not to meet this difficulty, why not let the verdict taken on the trial before the mayor, stand, as to all those who were satisfied with that verdict, without regard to the result of the trial in the circuit court, on appeal taken by others ? If the view urged by petitioners’ counsel should prevail it would be impossible, without doing injustice to some party or parties concerned, ever to conduct to a conclusion a proceeding to condemn property for a street, where numerous parties were interested as owners of the property to be condemned, or as property holders within the district to be charged with benefits. So far as the latter are concerned, the proceeding is designed to make an equitable apportionment of charges for benefits. It is one proceeding, not many, one judgment and not several. We are of the opinion, that the cause should again be tried de novo in the circuit court, and the writ of prohibition is denied and the petition dismissed.