53 W. Va. 539 | W. Va. | 1903
On the 17th of April, 1902, the Wheeling and Elm Grove Bail-road Co. served notice upon David T. Atkinson, Elizabeth Atkinson, William Erskine, trustee, and Elizabeth S. Yates, that on Saturday the 3rd day of May, 1902, it would file its petition in the circuit court of Ohio County for the appointment of commissioners to ascertain a just compensation to the said defendants as the owners thereof, for a certain strip of real estate situate in the district of Liberty of said county and to have such other proceedings by the said court as might be necessary to vest in said railroad company the title in fee simple, to said strip of land to be used by it for its railroad purposes and for public use under the provisions of the statutes relating thereto, and describing the said real estate proposed to be taken. On the 3rd of May, the applicant filed its petition accordingly; “and it appearing that the case is one in which the said petitioner has lawful right to take private property for the purposes stated in the application,” and the court proceeded to appoint commissioners “to ascertain what will be a just compensation to the persons entitled thereto for the strip of land de
The first question arising in this case is whether the order to Avbich the defendants take their writ is a final order or is it an interlocutory order to which a writ of error will not lie? The defendants rely upon Bridge Co. v. Bridge Co., 34 W. Va. 155, as holding that the order appointing commissioners is final, and cite the same case in 138 U. S. 287, where it is said: “The judgment appears to have been considered by the court (meaning the Supreme Court of this State) so far .final as to justify an appeal from it, and if the supreme court of a State holds the judgment, of an inferior court of a State to be final, Ave can hardly consider it in another light in exercising our appellate jurisdiction.” It appears from the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States very clearly that that court did not as an independent proposition regard it as a final judgment, but this Court, having entertained the writ of error treated it as such for the purposes of the case while in fact the question never Avas raised in this Court; and in Luxton v. North River Bridge Co., 147 U. S. 337, it is held, that an order of the Circuit Court of the United States appointing commissioners to assess damages for land taken by the Bridge Co. in N. J., is not a final judgment upon which a writ of error will lie. The last case cited distinguishes it from the Bridge Co. Case in 138 U. S., in that, it based its .decision on the last mentioned case, 138 U. S. “To have held otherwise might have Avholly defeated the appellate jurisdiction of this court under the constitution and'laws of the United States; for if the highest court of the State held the order appointing commissioners to be final and conclusive, unless appealed from the validity of the condemnation not to be open on a subsequent appeal ‘from the award of damages it is difficult to see hoAV this court could have reached the question of the validity of the condemnation except by writ of error to the order appointing commissioners. That case therefore affords no precedent of reason for sustaining this writ of error to the Circuit Court of the United States,” and the writ of error
For the reasons here given the writ of error in this case must be dismissed as improvidently awarded.
Writ Dismissed.