Court Opinion

ID: 6644777
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:48:44.952645+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:59:23.788019
License: Public Domain

Cobb, J.
This action was brought in the district court by the appellant against the appellees for the purpose of enjoining *387the erection of a stone grain elevator, then in course of construction by the individual appellees, on ground claimed by the corporation appellee, but which had been formally, at least, taken by the city of Kearney for the purpose of a street. The plaintiff was a large owner and holder of property in said city, some of which abutted on the said street. A temporary injunction was granted; but upon the final trial and hearing to the court a finding, was made and judgment rendered for the defendants, and the cause dismissed. The plaintiff brings the cause to this court by appeal.
In support of the finding and judgment of the district court several points are presented, but one which it is deemed necessary to discuss in support of the conclusion to which I have arrived upon a somewhat patient and thorough examination of the case.
The ordinance of the city of Kearney, upon which the proceedings for the condemnation of the ground in question were based, was copied in the record and is here reproduced :
“ AN ORDINANCE TO OPEN NEBRASKA AVENUE;
“ Be it ordained by the Mayor and Common Council of the City of Kearney:
“Section 1. That it is hereby deemed to be and it is necessary to open and extend Nebraska avenue, a street now existing and being in said city, from the north line of North Railroad street to the south line of South Railroad street in said city.
“ Section 2-, That for that purpose the following real estate be and the same is hereby condemned and appropriated to the use of said city as a street for public purposes, to-wit, a strip of land fifty feet in width, bounded as follows :
“ Commencing at the point where the east line of Nebraska avenue intersects the north line of North Railroad street, thence south to the south line of South Railroad *388street, thence west fifty feet (50), thence north to the north line of North Railroad street, thence east fifty feet (50) to the place of beginning.
“ Section 3. That John H. Roe, J. D. Seaman, George E. Smith, Abiel M. Pettis, W. C. Sunderland, all citizens of the city of Kearney, five disinterested householders of said city of Kearney, be and they are hereby elected to determine by assessment the damages suffered by the owner or owners of said property through which the said street is hereby opened and extended.
“ Section 4. Said assessors so appointed shall fix a time and place of meeting to make such assessment, and the city clerk shall give to the owners of real estate taken for opening said street at least ten days’ notice in writing of the same. Said notice may be served upon the agent of any corporation owning any part of said real estate. Said assessors before making said assessment shall subscribe and take an oath in writing that they will faithfully and impartially make the assessment to them submitted.
“ Section 5. Said assessors shall make their assessments in writing, and file the same in the office of the city clerk, together with an affidavit of the due and lawful publication of this ordinance, and an affidavit' of the service of the notice hereinbefore provided for upon the owners of said property so taken, or their agents, and the city clerk shall forward to the county clerk a duly certified copy thereof.
“Section 6. The mayor shall tender to theowner orown-•ers of said property, or their said agents, the-amount of the assessments so made, and thereupon said street shall be and become open to the public.
“ Section 7. All ordinances or parts of ordinances in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.
“■ Section 8. This ordinance shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage and publication.
“Attest: E. M. CüNNING-ham,
“ City Cleric.”
*389The authority on the part of the city to condemn and appropriate private property for the purpose contemplated by said ordinance is found in subdivision 18 of section 69 of chapter 14, of the Compiled Statutes, which is in the following language. I quote only the proviso : “ Provided, That in all cases the city or village shall make the person or persons whose property shall be taken or injured thereby, adequate compensation therefor, to be determined by the assessment of five disinterested householders, who shall be elected and compensated as may be prescribed by ordinance, and who shall in the discharge of their duties act under oath faithfully and impartially to make the assessment to them submitted.”
The point is that the five householders who made the assessment of the compensation to the owners of the property taken by virtue of the said ordinance were not elected in a manner prescribed by ordinance, and hence the proceedings of the city were ineffectual to appropriate the said property. This is a bill in equity to enforce such condemnation against the acknowledged owner of the fee. It will not be questioned that under the authorities, as well as upon the reason of the case, a condemnation and appropriation to be thus enforced must be stridi juris. See Mills on Eminent Domain, § 90, and authorities there cited. It is not sufficient that the jury or appraisers were possessed of all the qualifications provided by law, but they must have been elected in the manner provided by the statute authorizing the appropriation. It is obvious from the language of the proviso above quoted that it was the intention of the law-makers to provide that before the election of the five disinterested householders to assess the adequate compensation to the owners of property taken, or injured, for the purpose contemplated by the said section an ordinance should be passed by the city council, approved by the mayor, and published in accordance with the provision of the charter on that subject, providing a *390form, method, and manner for the election of such five disinterested householders, and for ascertaining and fixing their compensation for their services in making such assessment. The well-known rule that in construing a statute some force and meaning must be accorded, if possible, to all of its words and sentences, has been often invoked by this court, and cannot be questioned. Bearing this rule in mind I cannot believe that the purpose of the proviso is satisfied by an election or designation of such householders without any previous rule or prescribed manner or method by which they should be elected and compensated. Furthermore, I do not- think that the naming or designating of a person or number of persons in the body of an ordinance, embracing other and independent provisions, is an election within the meaning of the section now under consideration.
It is of the very essence of an election by independent voters that each one shall have an opportunity to vote for the candidate or person of his choice without having his vote so cast also counted for some one not his choice, or for some measure not approved by him. .In the matter now being considered it is quite reasonable to conclude, indeed it is quite obvious, that the main questions involved in the passage of the ordinance by the common council were the opening of the street and the appropriating of defendant’s property therefor ; the naming of the persons to assess the value of and damages to the property to be appropriated was the minor proposition, yet I believe it was deemed by the framers of the ■ provision of law now being considered a matter of sufficient importance to engage the attention of the common council, not only as a major but as the sole proposition on which to exercise its power of election, and that, too, after having previously passed an ordinance providing for or prescribing the method of such election.
While considering the proviso above quoted we should not lose sight of the word compensated. It is very clearly *391to my mind the intent and meaning of the language that the compensation or pay of the assessors should be prescribed,'fixed by ordinance, before entering upon the discharge of their duties by them. The assessor should be entirely impartial between the city and the property owner; to this end the power to fix the amount of their compensation for their services should not be allowed to remain potential in the city or counsel until after the services are performed. Such amount or rate to be fixed high or low as the city officers might be pleased or displeased with the valuation of the property or assessment of damages made by such assessors. This construction gives to the language of the section a clear and reasonable meaning. I know of none other which would.
I therefore reach the conclusion that the proceedings on the part of the city of Kearney, as shown by the record, in respect to the election of five disinterested householders to determine by assessment the adequate compensation to be made to the owners of property to be taken or damaged by reason of the opening of said street, did not follow the statute strictly, and hence that the plaintiff as a property-holder of said city acquired no right, either legal or equitable, to restrain by injunction the erection of the grain elevator mentioned in the petition.
Having reached the above conclusion, which, if correct, will sustain the finding and judgment of the district court, it is not deemed necessary to examine the other points raised by counsel and argued in the brief.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
The other judges conour.