366 Mich. 385 | Mich. | 1962
This case involves a controversy arising in connection with condemnation proceedings instituted by the State highway commissioner to obtain certain land in Van Burén county for highway purposes. In the course of said proceeding a petition was presented to the probate court of said county for the appointment of commissioners to determine the compensation to be paid for the property that had been taken. Said order, after naming the commissioners, indicated the scope of their duties in the following language:
“To (1) determine before the acquisition, the market value of the parcel or tract from which the aforesaid taking occurred, and (2) determine the market value of the remainder of said parcel or tract, if any there be, assuming justified rehabilitation completed on any remainder, of fences, buildings or other improvements, if any there be, which are real estate and not expressly taken and located on land acquired and which must be removed for exercise of the public right and use acquired, and (3) award the difference in market value after justified rehabilitation on any remainder plus the cost of such rehabilitation of any fences, buildings or other improvements which are real estate and not expressly taken and which add sufficiently to the market value of the remainder to justify the removal thereto, as just compensation to be divided and apportioned by the court between or among the interested parties, if any division is required.”
The petition of the highway commissioner on which the foregoing order was based designated several jiersons as interested therein as owners or otherwise, and also included in the list the Federal Land Bank of St. Paul as having a possible interest as mortgagee. Apparently there existed a lease covering the premises, or a portion thereof, and defendants claiming to be owners of the property joined
■ It will be noted in passing that the order appointing the commissioners did not require them to determine the market value of the respective interests that different parties might have in the property sought to be taken but, rather, to deal with parcels and tracts and to arrive at compensation in the manner specifically prescribed in said order, the compensation awarded “to be divided, and apportioned by the Court between or among the interested parties, if any division is required.” Thus it appears that the order from which the appeal has been taken in effect sought to modify the prior order by which the commissioners were appointed and which indicated the procedure that they would observe.
It is the claim of the attorney general, representing the State highway commissioner, that the action of the judge of probate in seeking to require the commissioners to appraise the owners’ interest, and
. The act under which the condemnation proceeding was instituted
“The court commissioners shall appraise the damages to be paid as compensation to each person interested in each such piece or parcel of property, and shall report such decision in •writing, signed by them' or a majority of them, at or before the time fixed for that purpose, but it shall not be necessary for said court commissioners to report on all of such property at one time.”
■ As amended by the act of 1941, said section was changed to read:
. “The court commissioners shall appraise the damages to be paid as compensation for each such piece or parcel of property, and shall report such decision in writing, signed by them or a majority of them, at*390 or before'the time fixed-for that purpose, but it shall not be necessary for said court commissioners to report on all of such property at one time.” (CL 1948, §213.186 [Stat Ann 1958 Rev §8.187]).
For the obvious purpose of providing the method of determining compensation for separate interests in or to a parcel to be taken the legislature by the 1941 act inserted in section 19 of the condemnation statute (CL 1948, §213.189 [Stat Ann 1958 Rev §8.190]), a provision specifically providing that the court “may determine the division of any award among the several claimants thereto.”
A condemnation proceeding under the statute may, in accordance with the provisions thereof, be instituted in either the circuit court or the probate court of the county in which the property sought to be taken for highway purposes is located. It thus appears that the legislature by the amendments of 1941 to the act intended to limit the power of the commissioners appointed by the court to the determination of the compensation to be awarded for the taking of each parcel or tract of land involved, and to invest the judge of the court in which the proceeding was instituted, whether circuit or probate, with the power to apportion the award for each parcel among the possessors of various interests therein. That the legislature might grant such authority to the judge of probate is not open to question. It is equally true, of course, that in the absence of a specific statutory provision on the subject the probate judge would not have the power to make the apportionment. Ashbaugh v. Sinclair, 300 Mich 673. The conclusion may not be avoided that the legislature by the amendments to the highway condemnation act made at the legislative session of 1941 intended to limit the function of commissioners appointed to de
It may be noted also that in the instant case the order from which the appeal has been taken provided merely for the making of separate awards to the landowners and to the lessees. Nothing was said as to possible rights of other parties in the property, including the mortgagee, if such there was. That a mortgagee is entitled to have his claim considered with the claims of others was recognized in In the Matter of the Petition of Dillman, 276 Mich 252.
Counsel for appellees have called attention to our decision in Lookholder v. State Highway Commissioner, 354 Mich 28, in support of their claim that each interest in a parcel of land taken for highway purposes must be separately appraised. That the owner of each such interest is entitled to compensation for what was taken from him is, of course, not open to question, but the answer to the argument is that the statute controls the procedure. The legislature has directed that the commissioners fix the amount of .the compensation for the taking of each parcel or tract, and that the court has the duty of apportioning the award for each such parcel among the claimants thereto in accordance with the interests of each. The Loohholder Case did not involve the duties of commissioners appointed by the court under the statute, but had reference to the requirement that the State highway commissioner, or board of county road commissioners, as the case may be, shall attempt, before instituting condemnation proceedings, to negotiate with all interest holders. In the recent case of In re Petition of State Highway
We are not concerned with the reasons that may have prompted the changes in the highway condemnation act by the adoption of the amendments of 1941. It may be noted, however, that the method of procedure contemplated by such amendments is in accord with the general rule observed in other States. The Minnesota supreme court in State, ex rel. Kafka, v. District Court of Ramsey County, 128 Minn 432, 436, 437 (151 NW 144), summarized such rule as follows :
“Whether separate awards are necessary under circumstances such as here disclosed has never heretofore been considered by this court. The question was raised, but not decided, in Smith v. City of St. Paul, 65 Minn 295 (68 NW 32). The uniform practice, however, has been, as we understand it, to con-. sider the property about to be condemned as an entire estate, so far as concerns the public, the fee owner, and those having lesser interests therein. All persons are made defendants whose interests are to be foreclosed; but this is done, not for the purpose of determining questions of title between them, but so that they may be heard upon the issues of the right to condemn and the amount of damages to be awarded in gross. While, therefore, apportionment and separate awards are often convenient and beneficial where several persons own interests in a single tract or parcel of land, and while, furthermore, such are quite commonly made where the proceedings are in a court or tribunal having power and capacity to inquire into the variant interests, even in the latter case the well nigh universal mode of reaching a fair valuation of the property and determination of the damages, is to consider the property as though*393 the entire and undivided estate and all interests in, the property were in a single person, and to find the value and damage in gross, thereafter apportioning the amount of the award thus arrived at between the various parties according to their interests.”
Á like conclusion is expressed in an annotation in 69 ALE 1263, and in a supplemental annotation in 166 ALE 1211. In these annotations numerous cases are cited in support of what is claimed to be the general rule. Doubtless the practice in some States depends on provisions of statute which have been adopted in accordance with the generally established practice.
• The case is remanded to the probate court of Yan Burén county with directions to set aside the order from which the appeal has been taken, and for further proceedings in the case. Questions of statutory construction being involved, no costs are allowed.
3? A 1925, No 352, as amended (CL 1948, § 213.171 et seq., as amended [Stat Ann 1958 Rev § 8.171 et seq-l). : -