85 Wash. 187 | Wash. | 1915
In 1908, the board of county commissioners of Spokane county, pursuant to the power conferred by statute, commenced proceedings to establish a county road in part across and over lands of relators. An award was made to relators for the value of the land to be taken, which was refused, whereupon an action was commenced to condemn the right of way over relators’ lands and to ascertain the damages
Whether or not relators were entitled to the relief prayed for depends upon the right of the board of county commissioners to abandon and discontinue the' condemnation proceedings. That such right exists seems clearly established by the great weight of authority. The purpose of an award by a jury or otherwise in condemnation proceedings is simply to fix the amount to be paid by the condemner before it can appropriate land to the desired purpose, and when this price is ascertained, the condemning party, in the absence of statutory provisions to the contrary, has a reasonable time to determine whether to accept or refuse the land at the price fixed. We know of no rule of law that compels a party seeking to condemn land for public use to proceed with the appropriation when in its judgment the price to be paid is exorbitant. The
The decree in this case gives to the county the right to appropriate the land of relators upon payment of the award, and this is all that it could do, since, under our constitution, there could be no appropriation until the damages had been first ascertained and paid. The judgment entered on the verdict is, therefore, not an appropriation of the land, and no decree to that effect could be entered until this judgment had been complied with and the money paid into court for the benefit of the relators.
Relators contend that the entry of this judgment on the award gave them a vested right to the money to which the subsequent action of the board could not deprive them. Under statutes such as ours, the rights of the parties are correlative. There can be no vested right in the one party until there is a vested right in the other; and since the condemning party can obtain no vested right in the land until it has paid the award,
The utmost that relators were entitled to was their costs in the condemnation proceedings. The lower court has found, however, to which no exception was taken, that the refusal to issue the warrant was only to the inclusion of the award, and did not extend to the judgment for costs.
Judgment affirmed.
Crow, Ellis, Main, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.