126 S.E. 705 | W. Va. | 1925
The declaration is in case for damages to plaintiff's lot of land, caused by defendant in lowering the grade of the street on which it abutted.
Defendant filed a special plea in bar to which plaintiff demurred. The trial court sustained the demurrer and certified its ruling for review.
The plea is to the effect that defendant, before it undertook to improve the street on which plaintiff's property abutted *145 served upon her a notice embodying a resolution passed by the council declaring the necessity of permanently improving the street "as required by law" and the date set for the hearing of property owners with reference thereto; and thereafter an ordinance was introduced and passed by the city council providing for the improvement, and subsequently a contract was let for the work and the improvement duly made in accordance with the plans, specifications, and profile prepared therefor, "as required by law"; that defendant did not at any time before the introduction and passage of the ordinance or prior to the paving and improvement file with the council any statement of damages which, in her opinion, she would sustain by reason of said improvement.
Evidently the plea relies upon and sets up the act of the legislature in granting to defendant its municipal charter, and the expression "as required by law" refers to that act, although it is not pleaded; and we have held in Groves v.County Court,
Is the statute in contravention of Sec. 9, Art. 3 of the Constitution? Does it deprive her from receiving or asserting damages for injuries done to her property by the city in improving the street for public use? The statutory proceedings for condemnation of private property for public use and the ascertainment of just compensation do not apply where a city changes the grade of its streets. There is nothing to condemn. There is no statutory method of ascertaining such resultant damages by condemnation procedure. Without organic or statutory law no such resultant damages were recoverable. It wasdamnum absque injuria, an injury without a wrong. But the Constitution has cured that, and now provides that private property shall not be injured by public use without compensation. It is no longer an injury without a wrong, and although no method is prescribed for obtaining redress, or for ascertaining the damages prior to the injury by general law, a suit in case is maintainable. Johnson v. City of Parkersburg,
But it is argued that the time in which plaintiff is allowed to file her sworn estimate of damages, after examining the data on file giving her full information regarding the change of grade and improvement to be made, is so meagre and short that it amounts to an unreasonable and arbitrary condition precedent and is unconstitutional and void for that reason. She is required to file her sworn estimate of damages at some time before the city by ordinance duly introduced and passed has determined to make the improvement. The latter cannot pass the ordinance until three days have elapsed after completion of the notice of publication or service of notice prescribed in Section 64; and it is argued that she is allowed only threedays in which to make up and file her estimate of damages after being served with notice. That does not necessarily follow. Assuming, but not deciding, that three days is not a sufficient time and is therefore unreasonable and arbitrary, it does not appear from the record that she had only three days in which to file her estimate. The conclusion on which the argument of unconstitutionality is based follows from a mere assumption. A week, ten days, or more may have elapsed between the time she was served with notice and the time the ordinance was passed and the work let to contract. The statute may be interpreted and enforced by the city in such a way as to render it bad; but it does not appear from the pleadings that such was done. We cannot assume facts for the purpose of passing upon a constitutional question arising on them. The argument in the briefs based *150 upon the alleged unreasonable and arbitrary feature of the statute is not warranted under the plea and demurrer thereto, and the point will not be considered. The question does not fairly arise on the record of the case. To defeat plaintiff's action, the plea sets up the statute as a bar. As before stated, the plea gives no date of the service of the notice required by Sec. 64 nor the date of the passage of the ordinance. Every plea (and in fact every pleading), must consist of matter of fact the sufficiency of which as a defense may be determined by the court upon demurrer. 1 Chitty Pleading (16th Am. ed.) page 694. It must be direct and positive and not by way of rehearsal, reasoning or argument. It is presumed that a party in his pleading will state his case most favorably for himself and that if he does not state it with all its legal circumstances, the case is not in fact favorable to him, and it is a rule of construction that if a plea on its face has two intendments it shall be construed most strongly against the pleader. 1 Chitty Pleading, page 700. Can we say that the pleader admits that the ordinance was introduced and passed immediately after the expiration of three days from the completion of notice to plaintiff? We do not think the rule of construction would extend that far. However, to be a bar to the action it must be shown that the statute was not interpreted and enforced by the city so as to make it unreasonable and arbitrary. Otherwise it would be no bar. Where statutes of limitation have been under review the great weight of authority is that the period fixed by the Legislature may be declared unreasonable where it is so manifestly inadequate as to amount to a denial of justice. Lamb v. Powder River Live Stock Co., 132 F. 434, 67 L.R.A. 558. "Where a plea relies upon a statute authority as a defense, it must allege the facts which it asserts to be so authorized and cannot plead generally that it complied with the statute." 21 Rawle C. L. page 444, Sec. 7. We are of the opinion that the plea is not sufficiently full and definite to make a complete bar to the action, inasmuch as the interpretation and consequent enforcement of the statute may have been a practical denial of justice, and therefore no bar. For that reason the demurrer was properly sustained.
*151Ruling affirmed.