213 N.W. 492 | N.D. | 1927
This is a condemnation action instituted by the village of Reeder to condemn eight tracts of land belonging to the defendant Severt Hanson. The first seven tracts are sought to be taken for street purposes and the eighth tract containing some 36.12 acres is sought to be taken for "public grounds." The case was tried to a jury which returned a verdict fixing the value of the tracts so sought to be taken in sums aggregating in all $1204.60. The trial court made findings in favor of the plaintiff upon all other questions involved and ordered judgment in favor of the plaintiff. Thereafter the defendant Severt Hanson moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial. The motion was denied and the defendant has appealed from the judgment and from the order denying such motion.
Numerous errors are assigned by the appellant; some going to the right of the plaintiff to maintain the action at all; others relating to the admissibility of certain evidence offered by the plaintiff as regards the value of the lands in question, and admitted by the court over the defendant's objection.
Upon the trial there was introduced in evidence, a resolution adopted by the board of trustees of the village of Reeder on April 28, 1925, declaring that "it is deemed necessary to open and lay out the following streets, alleys, grounds and public places within the corporate limits of the village of Reeder." The resolution thereupon describes the eight tracts of land involved in this action. There was further introduced in evidence a resolution of the board of trustees of the village of Reeder to the same effect adopted April 20, 1925. This resolution, however, described only five of the tracts of land covered by the judgment in this action. This action was commenced by the service of summons and complaint on April 20, 1925. The original complaint described only the five tracts of land described in the resolution of April 20. On April 28, 1925 (the same day that the Village Trustees adopted the second resolution), plaintiff served an amended complaint, describing the eight tracts of land described in the second resolution, and praying judgment that all such tracts be taken for the stated public uses. There was no motion to strike the amended complaint, or any part thereof; *335 but the defendant, Severt Hanson, on May 7th 1925, appeared and interposed his answer to the amended complaint. The answer admitted that the defendant is the owner of the tracts of land described in the amended complaint; and stated that he offered no objection to the condemnation of three tracts described in the amended complaint, sought to be taken for street purposes; but asked that he be awarded a reasonable compensation for the value thereof. As regards the other four tracts sought to be taken for street purposes, the defendant denied the necessity of taking the particular properties sought to be condemned for such purposes; and as regards the tract of land sought to be taken for "public grounds" defendant asserted that "no public necessity exists" for the taking of such premises for public use; also that the village of Reeder is without power to condemn said land for "public grounds."
On the trial oral testimony was adduced on the part of the plaintiff tending to show the necessity for the taking of the seven tracts of land, sought to be taken for street purposes; and similar testimony was adduced on the part of the defendant tending to controvert the testimony offered by the plaintiff, as to several of these tracts. As regards the tract sought to be taken for public grounds, some of the officials and residents of the plaintiff village gave testimony tending to establish that a necessity existed for the taking of such tract of land for the purpose of establishing thereon a tourist camp, baseball grounds, play ground, and generally for large public meetings and celebrations. (It was also suggested that the tract might be used for an aeroplane landing field.) In view of the conclusion that we have reached as to the disposition that must be made of this case it is not necessary to make any more extended statement of the evidence.
The first contention of the appellant is that the action must fail because there was no publication of the resolution of the village trustees declaring the necessity for the public improvements and the taking of the land in controversy for public use. In support of this contention appellant cites and relies upon the decision of this court in Fargo v. Keeney,
It is next contended by the appellant that the action must fail because there was not attached to the original complaint a sufficient plat showing the location, general route and termini of the right-of-way of the street sought to be extended or opened over, and upon, the tracts of land sought to be condemned for street purposes. (Comp. Laws, 1913, § 8220, subd. 4.) It is further contended that the action must fail because the resolution of the village trustees declaring the necessity for the taking of the eight tracts of land in controversy had not been adopted at the time the action was instituted. We think that a sufficient answer to both of these contentions is that the resolution of necessity was adopted before the amended complaint was served and the amended complaint was accompanied by a proper map. The defendant made no objection to the amended complaint by motion to strike, or otherwise, but appeared generally and interposed an answer joining issue with the amended complaint. The trial was had upon the issues framed. The above stated objections to the original and amended complaint were not mentioned by defendant's counsel until after the trial had commenced and witnesses were being examined, and even then there was merely a general objection to the effect that the court had no jurisdiction in the matter. We think that in the circumstances the defendant is in no position to raise these questions and that he must be deemed to have waived whatever objections he, in the first instance, might have been entitled to interpose. It is a fundamental rule that an objection to a pleading, of this nature, may be, and will be, deemed waived by failure to urge it at the proper time, or by any act which, in legal contemplation, implies an intention to overlook it. See 31 Cyc. 717 ?735, 752 et seq. See also 3 C.J. 745 et seq. The ruling, most favorable to the defendant, that could possibly have been made upon the objections now urged (even according to his contention) would have been a dismissal of the action. This dismissal, however, would clearly have been without *337 prejudice to the institution of another action upon the facts alleged in the amended complaint. As has been stated the summons and original complaint were served April 20, 1925; the amended complaint was served April 28, 1925, and the defendant interposed his answer to the amended complaint on May 7, 1925. If the defendant had raised the procedural objections now urged at the time he served his answer, and if those objections had been sustained to the full extent for which defendant now contends, the plaintiff would have had ample time to institute a new action upon the facts stated in the amended complaint and bring the same on for trial at the December 1926 term of said district court.
The principal assignment of error predicated upon rulings on the admissibility of evidence concerns evidence adduced by the plaintiff to show the value of the land sought to be condemned. Among the many errors so assigned is one relating to the admission of the testimony of one Hamann. He testified that he is a supervisor of Reeder township and resides some three miles east of the village of Reeder; that as supervisor of said Reeder Township he had bought land from different parties for road purposes. His testimony did not show when these lands were bought or where they were situated within the township, and yet he was permitted to testify, over appropriate objection on the part of the defendant challenging the admissibility of the evidence, that the highest price he had paid for any of the land so purchased for road purposes was "twenty-five dollars an acre including the damage." The inadmissibility and prejudicial character of this evidence is, we think, too clear for controversy and must of necessity result in a reversal of the judgment. Whether the value of lands can be shown by evidence of prices paid at actual sales of other lands in the neighborhood is an open question in this jurisdiction; but, even in those jurisdictions where evidence of other sales is held to be admissible for the purpose of proving value, the evidence is restricted to voluntary sales, not too remote in point of time, of lands of similar character in that immediate vicinity. 13 Enc. Ev. pp. 460 et seq.; 1 Jones, Ev. § 168; Dallas v. Boise,
Inasmuch as a new trial must be had, we deem it proper to consider some of the questions likely to arise upon another trial. The functions *338
and powers of the legislative department of a city or village, as regards the opening of streets, has been considered by this court in the following cases: Lidgerwood v. Michalek,
The rules announced in these cases should furnish a guide to the governing boards of villages and cities, and their legal advisers, in such matters. Our statutes expressly confer upon the board of trustees of a village the power to lay out and open streets. Comp. Laws, 1913, § 3861, subd. 9; Ashley v. Minneapolis, St. P. S. Ste. M.R. Co. supra. Our statutes further authorize a city or village, whenever it becomes necessary to so do, to exercise the right of eminent domain to effectuate such purpose. Comp. Laws, 1913, § 3985; Lidgerwood v. Michalek, supra. And it has been definitely settled by the decisions of this court that the question of the necessity for the extension of a street within a city or village is a legislative, rather than a judicial, question; that the power to determine the same is vested in the city council or the board of village trustees, as the case may be, and that the only question of necessity to be determined by the courts is as to whether the particular property sought to be condemned is necessary for such public use. Grafton v. St. Paul, M. M.R. Co.
There is some intimation in the record, and upon the argument of this case it was admitted as a fact, that the Village of Reeder has availed itself of §§ 4064-4071, Comp. Laws 1913, which statutory provisions authorize a village to organize as a part district. If this be true, it necessarily follows that the board of trustees of a village have no power to maintain an action to condemn property for park purposes. Fargo v. Gearey,
For the reasons heretofore stated, the judgment must be reversed and a new trial had. It is so ordered.
BIRDZELL, Ch. J., and BURKE, BURR, and NUESSLE, JJ., concur.