84 Neb. 185 | Neb. | 1909
This is a mandamus proceeding brought by Jacob Katelman, the relator, to compel the city of Omaha and its treasurer to pay in full certain special fund warrants issued to him by said city. The relator had judgment, and respondents have appealed.
The pertinent facts disclosed by the record are that in October, 1904, the city of Omaha passed an ordinance declaring the necessity of appropriating certain real estate, including lot 14, in block 16, College Place addition to the city of Omaha, and part of the adjacent vacated alley, for park and boulevard purposes. Said lot and a part of the vacated alley on the north thereof was owned by the relator. Freeholders were appointed to assess the damage to the owners of the property and parties inter
The laAv under which the condemnation proceedings were had is section 7478, Ann. St. 1903, and, so far as material to this inquiry, is as follows: “Whenever it shall become necessary to appropriate private property for the use of the city for * * * boulevards, * * * and such appropriation shall be declared necessary by ordinance, the mayor, with the approval of the council, shall appoint three disinterested freeholders of the city, who after being duly sworn to perform the duties of their appointment with fidelity and impartiality, and after reasonable notice to the owners and parties interested in said property, shall assess the damages to the owners of the property and parties interested therein, respectively,
Upon the other hand, the relator contends that, under this section of the statute, it was the duty of the appraisers to ascertain the amount and extent of damages suffered by each person having an interest in or lien upon the land, and that the total value of the land taken should be apportioned among the various persons having an interest in or lien upon the land; that the confirmation of the appraiser’s report is a final adjudication of all the rights of all persons and parties interested in the lot who had notice and who were parties to the condemnation proceeding, unless an appeal was prosecuted from the award of the appraisers as provided by the statute. It is conceded that the. city of Omaha and its treasurer had notice of and were parties to the condemnation proceed
The determination of this appeal' rests upon the construction to be placed upon said section 7478. If it was the duty of the appraisers to ascertain the amount of the damage that would be sustained by each person having an interest in or a lien upon the land appropriated, it would follow that the report of the appraisers that relator was entitled to $3,000, less $13.52 for general tax unpaid, was the ascertainment of his damage by reason, of taking the lot in question, and that, as there was no finding of a lien for the city for special assessments, it was equivalent to a finding that the city had no lien upon the lot. Section 7479, which follows the above quoted section, provides for an appeal from the assessment of damages to the district court of the county within 30 days after the assessment, and further provides that the remedy by appeal shall be deemed and held to be exclusive. The statute provides for reasonable notice of the proposed assessment of damages to the owners and parties interested in the property, and that the appraisers shall assess the damages to the owners of the property and parties interested therein, respectively. In Gerrard v. Omaha, N. & B. H. R. Co., 14 Neb. 270, it is said: “The railroad company acquires merely the right of way possessed by the parties to the proceedings. It is therefore its duty to bring in all parties having an interest in the (‘state- in order that the condemnation money may be properly applied.” In Dodge v. Omaha & S. W. R. C Go., 20 Neb. 276, it is said: “The responsibility of making all persons entitled to the fund parties to the action rests with it, and it acts at its own peril when it fails to make interested persons, whose interests are shown by record, parties to the proceeding, in order that they may assert their right to the fund paid in.” This court has also in
Respondents contend that the report of the appraisers is final only as to the value of the land appropriated, and that it is not final nor conclusive as to the respective interests of the different parties who have an interest or lien in the property. This view seems to obtain in New York. Carpenter v. City of New York, 44 App. Div. (N. Y.) 230; Matter of Board of Education, 59 App. Div. (N. Y.) 258. The cases from New York arose from condemnation proceedings by New York City. The statute there apparently contemplates that an action may be maintained against the mayor by any person interested in the property for his proportionate share of condemnation money. The reverse is true in this state. The only remedy afforded is by appeal. For this reason, we do not regard the New York cases as in point.
Respondents urge that the appropriation of the land divests the lien of the city and transfers it to the condemnation money, and therefore the city has a lien on the fund so long as it has not been paid to the relator. It is undoubtedly true that the. condemnation proceeding divests the lien of all persons who are parties to the proceeding and transfers all liens existing upon the property to the fund provided for the payment of land which stands in lieu thereof. Dodge v. Omaha & S. W. R. Co., 20 Neb. 276. But the lienor must protect his lien in the manner provided by law, and that is to have it ascertained and declared by the appraisers, and, if he fails or refuses to establish his lien, he must appeal from the award. The statute afforded the city ample opportunity to protect its lien. It might have had the award provide for its payment out of the damages awarded for the taking
The judgment of the district court is right, and we recommend that it be affirmed.
By the Court: For the-reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.