From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

State ex Rel. City of St. Louis v. Oakley

Supreme Court of Missouri, Court en Banc
Jul 2, 1945
188 S.W.2d 820 (Mo. 1945)

Opinion

No. 39413.

July 2, 1945.

1. EMINENT DOMAIN: When Title Passes: General Rule. In condemnation suits under the general statutes the title is acquired by the condemnor when it pays to the owner, or into court for him, the amount of damages awarded by commissioners legally appointed, although the judgment does not become final and appealable until all exceptions are determined and the commissioners' report finally approved.

2. EMINENT DOMAIN: Municipal Corporations: St. Louis Charter: When Title Passes. The same rule applies that title passes when the City of St. Louis pays the award of the commissioners, though final judgment has not been entered.

3. EMINENT DOMAIN: Municipal Corporations: St. Louis Charter: Damages for Change of Grade Before Entry of Street Widening Judgment. Where the City of St. Louis paid the award of the commissioners in a street widening suit and then took possession and paved the widened street, the city acquired title though no final judgment had been entered, and damages may be awarded in a subsequent change of grade suit.

4. MANDAMUS: Eminent Domain: Award of Damages and Benefits: Jurisdiction of Circuit Court. The circuit court had jurisdiction to submit to commissioners the question of damages and benefits resulting from change of grade.

Prohibition.

PRELIMINARY RULE DISCHARGED.

George L. Stemmler, Joseph F. Holland, James B. Steiner and Oliver T. Johnson for relator.

(1) The City of St. Louis, relator herein, in the Archwill case deposited into the registry of the trial court the amount of the commissioners' awards upon the filing of their report, took possession of the property and constructed Gravois Avenue, 108 feet wide, including the underpass, pursuant to Section 6, Article XXI, but said section does not authorize final judgment or the acquisition of a street easement in said Gravois Avenue. City Charter, Sec. 6, Art. XXI; Thompson v. St. Louis, 253 S.W. 969. (2) The City of St. Louis prepares final judgments for the circuit court to enter in street widening projects under the authority of Section 8, Article XXI, of the Charter, and under no other provisions of the Charter. Upon entry of final judgment the commissioners' report is approved and said judgment recites that the City have and hold the property petitioned for, describing the same for the purposes petitioned for, namely the public street. In the Archwill case final judgment has not been entered and therefore the City has not acquired the property and street easement in Gravois Avenue, 108 feet wide, in the manner provided by the Charter. City Charter, Sec. 8, Art. XXI; State ex rel. City of St. Louis v. Sartorious, 102 S.W.2d 890. (3) In the Archwill case the City deposited into the registry of the court the amount of the commissioners' awards upon the filing of their report, took possession of the property and constructed the street and underpass in Gravois Avenue, 108 feet wide, but such acts did not give the City the title to the street easement in said cause; only the final judgment in said cause will give the City the street easement or public street. City Charter, Sec. 8, Art. XXI; Schwab v. St. Louis, 310 Mo. 116, 274 S.W. 1058. (4) It is only when final judgment, in a street widening case or in a street grading damage case, is entered according to Section 8, Article XXI of the Charter, that special benefits in either instance are enforceable as liens. Schwab v. St. Louis, 310 Mo. 116, 274 S.W. 1058. (5) Only when final judgment is entered in the Archwill case, thereby making Gravois Avenue a public street, 108 feet wide, will the Gruss case be ready for reference to the Condemnation Commission. See authorities under Point (6). (6) The Board of Aldermen passed ordinances to widen Gravois Avenue, 108 feet wide, and the Archwill case was filed pursuant to said ordinances on January 17, 1938. The City of St. Louis filed the Gruss case on September 20, 1940, pursuant to Ordinance No. 41863, to ascertain the grade damages and assess the special benefits therefor on Gravois Avenue, 108 feet wide, while the Archwill case, the Gravois widening, was pending prior to final judgment therein. Therefore, Gravois Avenue is not a public street according to the procedure provided in the City Charter, and the Gruss case cannot now be assigned to Commissioners to determine the damages and assess special benefits. The Board of Public Service of said City fixes the grades on streets, and those streets must be public streets. City Charter, Sec. 5, Art. XIII. The Board of Aldermen, by ordinance, provides for grade damage only on public streets. City Charter, Sec. 1, Art. XXI, subdiv. (2). It is the duty of commissioners to assess damages and benefits in grade suits only on public streets. City Charter, Sec. 4, Art. XXI. (7) Pursuant to ordinances for the widening of streets or for the change of the grade of streets, the city counselor must file the suits within six months after the effective dates of said ordinances. In each instance said suits were filed within time. City Charter, Sec. 1, Art. XXI. (8) The filing of the Gruss case, while the Archwill case was pending and not reduced to final judgment, is in harmony with the Charter, which authorizes the Board of Aldermen, in its discretion, to consolidate widening and grade damage suits; or, to file them separately, according to the requirements of the ordinances as passed by the Board of Aldermen. City Charter, first 12 lines, Sec. 1, Art. XXI. (9) The Charter should be construed to effect the evident purpose of the legislative act. State ex rel. Siegel v. Grimm, 284 S.W. 490. (10) This court has jurisdiction in prohibition because the amount of damages involved and unsettled in the Gruss case is $70,000, and in three parcels in said case the damages in each instance will amount to more than $7500. R.S. 1939, sec. 2078. The trial court has jurisdiction to refer a change of grade suit to the Condemnation Commission when the project giving rise to grade damages is a public street, but not otherwise, Gravois Avenue is not yet a public street, 108 feet wide. If reference is made to the Condemnation Commission, the relator has no adequate remedy by appeal or otherwise except by writ of prohibition. If assessments of damages and special benefits are made in the Gruss case before Gravois Avenue becomes a public street. 108 feet wide, said assessments would apparently be void under the express language of the Charter provisions cited and discussed under Point (6). The City's remedy is now by prohibition. Railroad Co. v. Wear. 135 Mo. 230; State ex rel. v. Elkins, 130 Mo. 90.

Frank Coffman and R.T. Brownrigg for respondent.

(1) The formality of a final judgment in condemnation proceedings under the City Charter, the lack of which is the basis for relator's claim to the writ in this case, is of no consequence at the stage of the proceeding reached in the case in question before respondent, because the City has acquired the street casement in the property taken, and has thus established Gravois a public street 108 feet wide, by paying into court the first award made for the land, completing the project, and using the land for the purpose taken. The entry of the final judgment, which is to follow, in respect to the City's right to hold and use the land for such purpose, is in effect, entirely administrative, nothing being left for judicial determination except the final settlement of the account between the property owner and the condemnor. Charter, City of St. Louis, Art. XXI; City of St. Louis v. Senter Comm. Co., 85 S.W.2d 21; State ex rel. City of St. Louis v. Sartorious, 102 S.W.2d 890: Thompson v. St. Louis, 253 S.W. 969. (2) And the award of damages and the assessment of special benefits in the grade case, filed for that purpose, before the final judgment in the taking case, will be valid. Authorities under (1).


This is an original proceeding in prohibition, the determination of which involves a consideration of two cases pending in the circuit court of the City of St. Louis.

The first, or Archwill case, is a condemnation suit filed by the City, pursuant to an ordinance duly passed, for widening a portion of Gravois Avenue from 80 feet wide to 108 feet wide. This was assigned to the Condemnation Commission which filed its report awarding damages to property owners in the sum of $125,000.00, including $5,071.00 to defendant Clarence H. Roehm. The city deposited the total amount awarded, took possession of the property, paved the widened portion of the street and constructed an underpass. Certain exceptions were filed to the Commissioners' report, all of which were settled. The award of $5,071.00 in favor of Clarence H. Roehm was paid to him on his application. Relator's brief states that the City [821] through oversight neglected to dismiss its exception to the Roehm award until after the instant prohibition case was filed in the Supreme Court. No final judgment approving the commissioners' report has been entered.

The second, or Gruss case, is a condemnation suit filed by the city to ascertain the damages to private property and to assess special benefits resulting from a change of grade of Gravois Avenue, as widened, in accordance with an order of the Board of Public Service. In this suit damages as to 33 of the 42 parcels have been settled. The damages to the tract owned by Clarence H. Roehm, which relator says will exceed $7,500.00, have not been settled. On motion filed by Roehm and on stipulation that the same might be done without prejudice, the Gruss case was assigned to a division of the circuit court and the judge has indicated his intention to refer the same to the Condemnation Commission to begin the trial of the grade damages. To prevent such reference the city, as relator, filed the instant prohibition suit in this court.

Briefly, relator's position is that under Article 21 of the city charter damages cannot be assessed in the Gruss case for changing the grade of Gravois Avenue, as a street 108 feet wide, because no final judgment for widening the street has been rendered in the Archwill case. To put it another way, relator claims that the city will not get title to the widened portion of the street until final judgment in the Archwill case; that the street to the width of 108 feet is not yet a public street and that damages for changing its grade cannot be assessed until it legally becomes a public street.

Relevant portions of Article 21 of the city charter are:

"Sec. 6. At any time after the commissioners file their report the City may pay into court the amount of damage assessed, less benefits, if any, and thereupon it shall be entitled to take possession of or damage the property . . ."

"Sec. 8. The court upon approving the commissioners' report shall render final judgment thereon reciting the report and adjudging that the city have and hold the property petitioned for, describing the same, for the purposes specified, upon payment of the damages less the benefits assessed in each instance; that so much of the report as is a judgment for benefits against specific property be a lien on such property for ten years from entry of the judgment, and prior to all other liens thereon; and that the city recover the respective benefits in excess of damages assessed in each instance against private property, . . . and have execution therefor."

In condemnation suits under our general statutes we have consistently held that the casement in or title to private property is fully acquired by the condemnor when it pays to the owner, or into court for him, the amount of damages awarded by commissioners legally appointed, although the judgment does not become final and appealable until all exceptions are determined and the commissioners' report finally approved. [State ex rel. v. Day, 327 Mo. 122, 35 S.W.2d 37, and cases cited.] In the Day case we said: "The condemnor in every case, in the exercise of a discretion not subject to judicial review, makes its own appropriation of private property for public use. When it pays to the owner of the property so appropriated just compensation the title passes by operation of law. The only function that the court performs in a condemnation proceeding is the ascertainment of just compensation, unless the question of public use he drawn into the proceeding. It may in its judgment make pronouncement of condemnation, but if so its judgment in that respect is a mere empty form." To the same effect is State ex rel. v. Bruce, 334 Mo. 312, l.c. 315, 66 S.W.2d 847.

Despite a difference between the language used in the city charter from that in our general condemnation statutes, we think the legal effect is the same so far as the time of passing title is concerned and so, in substance, we have held.

In Thompson v. St. Louis (Mo.), 253 S.W. 969, the city had brought condemnation to widen a street. Commissioners had awarded damages which the city had deposited, but the landowner had not accepted. The city took possession of the increased width, paved the original width of the street, and then created a benefit district and issued tax bills. The owner sued to cancel the tax bills, one ground being there had been no final judgment in the suit to widen the street. We held the tax bills valid; that the city's right to the property condemned accrued on [822] deposit of the commissioners' award and the fact that final judgment had not been rendered was of no consequence.

State ex rel. City of St. Louis v. Sartorius, Judge, 340 Mo. 832. 102 S.W.2d 890, was a condemnation suit in which the city deposited the amount of the first award of commissioners. The award was set aside and a second award was filed for a greater amount. We held that the city could not be compelled to increase its deposit or vacate the property.

In City of St. Louis v. Senter Commission Co., 337 Mo. 238, 85 S.W.2d 21, l.c. 25, we said: "So far as the record shows practically all of the plaza property had been acquired by that time, and the city had paid into court the damages awarded for the rest. The city, therefore, obtained this property for public purposes before the final judgment in the case." (Emphasis ours.)

Relator's position is untenable. It says that Gravois Avenue is not a public street 108 feet wide because the judgment in the Archwill case is not final. But, if the widened street is not a public street, the city has become a trespasser by changing the grade of private property. To further show the inconsistency: under the city charter the proceeding to widen the street and to change the grade could have been included in the same suit. If this had been done the city would be in the impossible position of saying that damages for changing the grade could not even be submitted to commissioners until title be acquired by final judgment; although, of course, no final judgment could be rendered until all damages had been reported on by commissioners and the report approved by the court.

The language in Section 8 of the charter requiring the final judgment to recite "that the city have and hold the property," etc., standing alone, might furnish some basis for relator's contention But Section 8 must be construed with Section 6 which expressly states that upon depositing the amount of the commissioners' award the City "may take possession of or damage the property." The city did take possession of the widened portion of the street, paved it, and it has ever since been used as a part of the public street. The widened street is just as much a public street as it will ever be and the city is not in a position to claim otherwise.

We see nothing to prevent the circuit court from submitting to commissioners the question of damages and benefits resulting from change of grade.

Accordingly, the preliminary rule in prohibition heretofore issued herein is hereby discharged. All concur.


Summaries of

State ex Rel. City of St. Louis v. Oakley

Supreme Court of Missouri, Court en Banc
Jul 2, 1945
188 S.W.2d 820 (Mo. 1945)
Case details for

State ex Rel. City of St. Louis v. Oakley

Case Details

Full title:STATE OF MISSOURI at the Relation of the CITY OF ST. LOUIS, Relator, v…

Court:Supreme Court of Missouri, Court en Banc

Date published: Jul 2, 1945

Citations

188 S.W.2d 820 (Mo. 1945)
188 S.W.2d 820

Citing Cases

State of Missouri, ex Rel. v. Maughmer, Judge

(1) Upon payment of the amount of the award of the commissioners in the condemnation suit, the Norborne Land…

Caruthersville School Dist. v. Latshaw

So the "face of the record" shows this jurisdictional fact. Hadley v. Bernero, 103 Mo. App. 549; Steinbaum v.…