109 Tenn. 640 | Tenn. | 1902
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action brought by the Tennessee Central Railroad Company in the circuit court of Davidson county by petition, in the form prescribed by the statutes in relation to such proceedings, to have a portion of the lands of the defendants condemned and set apart for a right of way for its railroad, which it had located over the same, and the damages accruing
The defendants made defense by answer, denying the right of the plaintiff to maintain its action for want of power to exercise the right of eminent domain, and to-appropriate the lands in question, upon several grounds, not necessary to be stated.
The circuit judge, upon the preliminary trial of the issues thus made, held that the plaintiff had the right to have the land described in its petition condemned for railroad purposes, and appointed a jury or commissioners to lay it off by metes and bounds, and assess the damages, actual and incidental, accruing to the defendants in consequence of such appropriation.
The defendants tendered a bill of exceptions to this action of the court, and prayed an appeal to this court,, which was denied; and the commissioners are proceeding to execute the order of the court in the premises, but as yet have filed no report of their action.
The case is'now before us upon a petition for writs of certiorari and supersedeas to bring it into this court to review this judgment of the trial court, and stay the proceedings thereunder until it shall be here heard and determined.
This application is resisted by the plaintiff, insisting that this court can not acquire or take jurisdiction of cases for the correction of errors in judgments
The writ of certiorari does not owe its existence to constitutional provision or statutory enactment. It is a common-law writ, of ancient origin, and one of the most valuable and efficient remedies which come to us with that admirable system of jurisprudence.
This court, the highest tribunal in the State, with appellate and supervisory jurisdiction over proceedings and .judgments of all inferior courts, has the inherent power to grant it whenever necessary in the exercise and enforcement of this jurisdiction. It is not restricted from its use by section 10 of article 6 of the constitution, providing that the judges of inferior courts of law and equity shall have power to issue it in civil cases to remove them from any inferior jurisdiction into a court of law. This provision was only intended as a guarantee of the continuance of a power with which these judges were already vested.
The use of the writ was originally confined to criminal cases, and its extension by the judges of this class of the courts of North Carolina, when Tennessee was yet a part of that State, to civil cases, was controverted, for which reason, upon the organization of
The power is also expressly conferred by the provisions of the Code on the subject of the appellate jurisdiction of this court,, which provide for appeals, writs of error, or other proceedings for the correction of errors, and the authority to use all writs and
There are then four well-established, substantive modes by which the judgments of inferior courts may he reviewed, and errors therein corrected, by this court, in proper cases for their application. They are: Appeal, appeal in the nature of a Avrit of error, writ of error, and certiorari; and in a proper case the latter is as much a matter of common right as any of the others. We have numerous cases in Avhich certiorari has been used by this court and held a proper proceeding for this purpose, among the most important of which are Durham v. United States, 4 Hayw., 69; Kearney v. Jackson, 1 Yerg., 294; Railroad Co. v. Bate, 12 Lea, 573; Warner v. State, 13 Lea, 52; Johnson v. Harris, 16 Lea, 136; State v. Taxing Dist., Id., 245, and Brizendine v. State, 103 Tenn., 677-683 (54 S. W., 982). This writ, as said by Judge Peck in Durham v. United States, supra, is of the highest utility and importance for many purposes, and especially in curbing excessive jurisdiction and correcting errors, and most essential to the safety of the people and the public welfare. It was originally held to be a discretionary writ, and its use largely confined to the revision of proceedings not according to the forms of the common law; but under our practice and statutes its scope has been broadened and extended until it is now one of the
The cases in Avhich it will lie can not be defined. To do so would be to destroy its comprehensiveness and limit its usefulness. It is peculiarly applicable to all cases where the judgment or decree complained of is pronounced in a statutory proceeding, and not according to the course of the common law, where the tribunal is exceeding its jurisdiction, where no appeal or writ of error is allowed, or these remedies have been lost without fault or negligence of the applicant, and in all cases where errors in the adjudications of inferior courts over the judgments of which this has a revisory jurisdiction are sought to be corrected, and there is no other plain, speedy and adequate remedy; and wherever this writ will lie, a supersedeas will be granted to stay the proceedings under the judgment or decree sought to be reviewed, in the sound discretion of the court, much the same as in cases where it will be when a writ of error is granted.
These writs are peculiarly applicable to the case at bar. It is a statutory proceeding, widely differing from the courts of the common law, in which judgments may be pronounced against a defendant and executed before final disposition of the entire case is
We are of the opinion that certiorari is the proper proceeding to bring before this court for review judgments in condemnation proceedings of this character appropriating the lands of citizens for public purposes, where the right of the plaintiff to do so is for any reason denied'; and, where merits are shown, a supersedeas will issue to prevent the petitioner from entering upon the premises until the case is here decided.
It only remains to determine at what stage of the proceeding the judgment of the circuit court is so far final as to be reviewable in this way.
This is an anomalous action or proceeding, dual in its objects and results. The plaintiff recovers of the defendants the land sought to be appropriated, and the defendants recover of the plaintiff the value of the land and the damages accruing to the remainder of their property in consequence of the appropriation and the construction thereon of the proposed improvement, the former of which judgments may be pronounced and executed before the case is tried upon the question of damages.
The form of the petition and the procedure in the circuit court are prescribed in detail by the statute authorizing it, and are to be found in the Code of
When the petition is filed and the defendant brought before the court by due service of notice;, he may make defense by any appropriate pleading, and show cause, if he can, why relief sought should not be granted.
A jury of five or more commissioners is then appointed and instructed to go upon the land along with the sheriff of the county, lay off by metes and bounds the land required for the proposed work, and assess the damages of the owner, and reduce their action to writing, and deliver the same to the sheriff, to be returned by him to the court in which the proceeding is pending.
If no objection is made to the report, it is confirmed and proper judgments entered; but either party may except to it, and, upon sufficient reasons appearing, new commissioners may be appointed, who will be instructed and proceed in the same manner as those first appointed.
Either or both parties on the coming in of the report of the first or the second jury, if a second be appointed, may object thereto, and demand and have a trial in the usual manner before the court and a jury of all issues arising in the assessment of the damages the owner of the property may be entitled to recover.
But the petitioner, notwithstanding the case is undetermined upon the question of damages, and is yet
The plaintiff insists that there is no final judgment which can be reviewed by proceedings in error until the issues as to the damages to be recovered are tried, and the amount adjudged, while the defendants insist that the order of the court appointing the commissioners to lay off the land and assess the damages is such a final judgment.
We do not agree with either contention. There may be two final judgments in this action, which can be reviewed by separate proceedings in error prosecuted at different times.
The circuit court by implication clearly has authority, upon the filing of the report of the commissioners, and an appeal therefrom upon the question of damages, to a trial by jury in court, to award a recovery of the land described in the report, and issue a writ of possession to the plaintiff upon bond being filed as provided by the statute. Judgment for
The defendants, if the insistence of the plaintiff is correct, could be deprived of the possession of their property, and its usefulness destroyed, without compensation made or secured; and, if the plaintiff'
No such result was contemplated by the legislature, nor can be suffered to take place. Every citizen has a right to have the decision of the court of last resort in cases of this character before he can be deprived of the possession of his property. Every principle of right and justice demand that this be so.
We are, therefore, of the opinion that in proceedings of this kind, when the right to appropriate property is contested by the owner, and the case reaches the stage where the petitioner can give bond and take possession of the portion of the premises set apart in the report of the commissioners, and file such bond, the judgment of the circuit court condemning the property may be brought before this court for review by certiorari, although the issue as to the damages to be recovered by the defendants, if the appropriation is allowed, are yet pending, untried, in the lower court, and that in a proper case supersedeas will issue to restrain the plaintiff from taking possession until the case is here determined.
This case, however, does not come within this rule. The commissioners have not filed their report, no demand has been made or could be made for a trial by jury in court in the ordinary manner, and no bond has been filed, and it is only then that the judgment
The application in this case for writs of certiorari and supersedeas is, therefore, premature, and must be denied.