29 Wash. 1 | Wash. | 1902
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an application for a writ of review. The affidavit and petition shows that on the 2d day of February, 1900, John Schmidt and others- presented to the board of county commissioners of Adams county a
“This cause came on regularly this day for trial, C. L. Holcomb, prosecuting attorney for said Adams county, appearing for the petitioner, and W. W. Zent for the defendants, and at the time the case was called for tidal, and before the jury was impaneled to’ try said cause, the defendants offered to. prove that the road petitioned for was not one of general utility, and objected to. the impaneling of a jury until the court should first hear testimony and decide whether or not said road was one of general utility and necessity and ought to be established; but the court ruled that the decision of the board of county commissioners of said Adams county that said road petitioned for was one of general utility and should be opened and esr tablished was final and conclusive and binding upon the court, and that the only question opened to inquiry in this court was the amount of damages to1 be allowed and paid to the defendants, to which ruling of the court the defendants excepted, and exceptions were allowed.”
Thereupon the court called a jury to assess the damages to be. paid to the said relators, and refused to permit the relators to interrogate any witness as to the utility or necessity of said road, to. which ruling of the court defendants duly excepted and their exceptions were entered in the
Property used for a public highway is under the direct control of public agencies. The opening and keeping open of public highways is a governmental function. Prom time-immemorial a highway used for the public and controlled by the public has been considered a public use. There is. no necessity for a legislative or judicial determination that sncli a way is for a public use. We must construe the-constitution of this state as if that question was considered as settled by the makers of the constitution. As is said by Mr. Lewis in his work on Eminent Domain (2d eel.), 416:
“If we go back a century and place ourselves in the situation of those who framed the constitutions of the-original states, we shall find that the principal purposes, if not, the only purposes, for which private property was*5 appropriated were for ways and mills. The mills, were mostly saw-mills and grist-mills, and were accustomed, and in most cases, obliged, to saw and grind for toll for whomsoever applied. They were for public use, in the stricter sense of the phrase. There was- nothing in the practice of the states at the time the earlier constitutions, were adopted to- require that the words public use should have the meaning of public benefit or advantage.”
In course of time individuals and private corporations desired the use of property for uses beneficial to the public, such as for canals, turnpikes, railroads-, etc. In such case it was held by the courts that the necessity, expediency, or propriety of exercising the power of eminent domain and the extent and manner of its exercise were questions of general public policy, and belonged to1 the legislative department,. In granting the right of eminent domain to individuals and private corporations in such cases, the legislature often declared the purposes named in the act to he for the public use, and it was contended that this was conclusive upon the courts. Under such a construction it can he seen that the legislature might declare a use which was in reality a private use a public one@, and, if such a declaration was conclusive upon the courts; prívate property might in many instances he taken for a private use. Hence; the maker’s of our constitution, in order to put this question beyond controversy, inserted this clause in §16, art. 1 of the constitution;
“Whenever1 an attempt is made to take private property for a use alleged to he public, the question, whether the contemplated use he really public shall he a judicial question, and determined as, such, without regard to any legislative assertion that the usa is public.”
Thiaprovisionofthe constitution is not a limitation upon the right of the legislature to lay out public roads under the control of public agencies, and no previous detenni
The petition for the writ is denied.
B-eayis, O. J., and Fullerton, Hadley, Anders, Mount and Dunbar, JJ., concur.