Blissfield Community Schools District v. Strech

77 N.W.2d 785, 346 Mich. 186, 1956 Mich. LEXIS 306
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1956
DocketDocket 63, Calendar 46,770
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 77 N.W.2d 785 (Blissfield Community Schools District v. Strech) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blissfield Community Schools District v. Strech, 77 N.W.2d 785, 346 Mich. 186, 1956 Mich. LEXIS 306 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

Carr, J.

Plaintiff is a school district of the fourth class and as such is subject to the provisions of the school code of 1955 (PA 1955, No 269). Part 2, chapter 14, of the statute (Stat Ann 1955 Cum Supp §15.3711 et seq.) makes provision for the condemnation of land for school sites and additions thereto. Deeming it necessary to secure additional land for the erection of school buildings, and the establishment of facilities in connection therewith, plaintiff, through its school board, negotiated with the owners of property for the purpose of obtaining approximately 40 acres for the purposes indicated. Included therein whs a 5-acre parcel belonging to the defendant Karl Strech.

It is claimed that options were obtained on the desired property with the exception of Strech’s land, and that negotiations were had with him but that they were unsuccessful. Thereupon, pursuant to the statutory provisions above cited, the school board filed a petition in the circuit court of Lenawee county alleg *189 ing the necessity of acquiring the land in question for school purposes, and the failure to obtain it through negotiations. It was requested that the court fix a time and place for hearing on the petition and that the subsequent statutory procedure be followed. Said petition was filed September 6, 1955, and on the same day an order was issued providing for a hearing on the 4th day of October, following. Jurors were summoned, the hearing took place, and a certificate was returned by the jury declaring it necessary to take the property in question and fixing the value thereof at $1,200 per acre. A motion for a new trial was made and denied. Defendant has appealed to this Court claiming defects and irregularities in the proceedings of such nature as to render void the judgment entered on the finding of the jury.

It is conceded that the petition, as originally filed, did not correctly describe the property of the defendant that the schbol board desired to obtain. The error being discovered, an amendment containing a correct description of defendant Strech’s parcel was filed before submission of the case to the jury. No claim is made that prejudice resulted from the error or that anyone was misled because of the incorrect description in the original petition. The certificate returned by the jury correctly described it, and recited further that the jury had viewed the premises. No claim is made that the view was not of the property actually in dispute. Defendant, testifying in his own behalf on the hearing, was asked if the description in the petition was correct, and answered, “I guess it is.” He also stated: “I know where the property is. I should know, 30 years.” It is claimed that a copy of the amendment correcting the description was tendered to defendant but that he declined to receive it. In his opinion denying the motion for a new trial the circuit judge indicated that following the entry of judgment certain papers sent *190 to defendant by registered mail were rejected. It is a fair conclusion that defendant, who acted as his own attorney on the hearing in circuit court, took a hostile attitude toward the proceedings and toward the plaintiff.

Appellant claims that the fact that the property was not correctly described in the original petition rendered the proceedings void. In considering this claim the circuit judge, in his opinion on the motion for a new trial, came to the conclusion that the amendment was “properly and timely filed.” He further found that defendant was in no way prejudiced. As before noted, the proofs on the hearing related to the parcel in dispute which was correctly described in the certificate returned by the jury. Under the circumstances we are in accord with the finding of the circuit judge.

As a general proposition, procedural rules and statutes relating to the amendment of pleadings are liberally construed to accomplish their purpose. In 18 Am Jur, Eminent Domain, § 327, p 971, it is said:

“The rules applicable to the amendment of pleadings generally are in general recognized in condemnation proceedings. A petitioner may properly be permitted to amend the petition so as to limit the character of the easement sought to be condemned. The court may properly permit’ the amendment of the complaint or petition after the appraisement has been filed, to make the description of the real estate therein correspond with the description in the appraisement.”

In In re Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority, 306 Mich 373, 385, the Court quoted with approval from Randolph, The Law of Eminent Domain, § 354, pp 322, 323, as follows:

“ ‘The petition may be amended not only in formal matters, but to rectify substantial errors and omis *191 sions. Thus, the petition may be amended by adding necessary parties, altering the location of the work, reducing the quantity of land to be condemned, altering the description of the property in question, and alleging that the work will be of public utility, and thereby taken out of the category of private uses.’ ”

In accord with the quoted statement from Randolph is the following from 2 Lewis, Eminent Domain (3d ed), §561, pp 994-996:

“The practice of allowing amendments is one which should find favor with the courts, since it saves time and expense, both to the public and to the parties interested. We shall refer to the decisions without attempting to lay down any general rules. Amendments have been allowed so as to show that the signers were freeholders, as required by statute, by inserting the residence of the different owners, by inserting an allegation that a ditch would be conducive to health and of public utility, though essential to give jurisdiction, changing the description of a highway asked for, though on appeal, so as to conform to the way actually laid out and evidently intended to be asked for, by inserting an allegation of inability to agree, or refusal of selectmen to lay out the way petitioned for, by striking out the words ‘sitting as a court of chancery’ in the address to the court, by increasing the amount of damages claimed, by inserting or correcting allegations as to ownership, by making the description of the property sought to be taken more definite, or otherwise perfecting or changing the description, by adding new names to the petition, by inserting the names of the owners of land taken, by inserting a stipulation as to the manner of constructing a railroad across the property in question. It has been held that a petition cannot be amended by inserting an allegation essential to jurisdiction, especially after it has been acted upon. But the general rule is that the power of amendment extends to jurisdictional as well as other *192 matters. ‘Such statutes,’ says the court in one case, ‘are rightly accorded a liberal, as distinguished from a restrictive, interpretation, and are almost uniformly held to be as applicable to the correction of errors and omissions in the statement of jurisdictional facts as to the correction of other defects.’ ”

In support of the statements made in the quotations from Randolph and Lewis numerous decisions are cited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 N.W.2d 785, 346 Mich. 186, 1956 Mich. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blissfield-community-schools-district-v-strech-mich-1956.