Burger v. State Female Normal School

77 S.E. 489, 114 Va. 491, 1913 Va. LEXIS 111
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 13, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 77 S.E. 489 (Burger v. State Female Normal School) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burger v. State Female Normal School, 77 S.E. 489, 114 Va. 491, 1913 Va. LEXIS 111 (Va. 1913).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a proceeding upon the part of the State Female Normal School, of Farmville, Va., an institution chartered under the laws of this State, to condemn certain property situated in Farmville, Prince Edward county, Va. The mode of procedure prescribed by the statute seems to have been pursued. Some of the parties, however, were served with notice in person, others were proceeded against by order of publication. The court appointed commissioners, who went upon the land and reported that in their judgment $2,300 would be a just compensation for the land taken, and that no other person would be damaged.

Mary E. Burger, one of the defendants, excepted to the report of the commissioners,, but the court overruled the exception and confirmed the report, and ordered that when the sum ascertained by the commissioners to be the value of the property proposed to be taken should be paid into court, the title of the property should stand vested in the State Female Normal School according to law. To that judgment a writ of error was awarded by this court.

The petition assigns two grounds of error: First, the action of the court in overruling petitioner’s motion to dismiss the petition, upon the ground that the property sought to be taken, being occupied by a dwelling house, is not liable to be condemned; and second, the action of the court in refusing to give an instruction offered by the petitioner.

[493]*493The statute law applicable to the case is contained in chapter 46-B of Pollard’s Code, section 1105-f. So much of clause 3 of that section as need be considered in this, case is as follows: “Any company chartered by this State, which is authorized by its charter or by the laws of this State to condemn lands, or any interest or estate therein, or materials, or other property, for its uses, may, by its. officers, agents, or servants, enter upon any lands or waters for the purpose of examining the same and surveying and laying out such as may seem fit to an officer or agent authorized by it: provided, that no injury be done the owner or possessor of the land. But no company shall * * * under any provision of this act, invade the dwelling house of any person in a city or town, or any space within sixty feet thereof, without the consent of the owner, except in the case of a railroad company when it is decided by the commissioners (appointed to ascertain the value of the land or other property, or the interest or estate therein, to be taken) that it would otherwise be impracticable, without unreasonable expense, to construct such railroad; * * * ”

The succeeding clauses of that section, down to clause 24, prescribe the mode of procedure which shall be followed in the condemnation of land. Clause 24 provides that the preceding sections are not to apply to certain institutions of learning, hospitals, etc., or land owned by the State, or cemeteries. Clause 25 gives the right of condemnation to school districts and certain State institutions, and provides that “If the court, or the board of supervisors, of any county, the council of any city or town, the trustees of any school district, the institution for the deaf and blind, any of the State hospitals, the University of Virginia, the Virginia Military Institute, or any other institution of this State, cannot, because of the incapacity of the owner, or inability to agree upon a price or terms, [494]*494or because the owner cannot, with reasonable diligence, be found in this State, or is unknown, agree on terms of purchase with those entitled to any land, buildings, structures, sand, earth, gravel, water, or other material necessary to be taken and used for the purposes of such county, city or town, or school district, or for the purposes of the institution for the deaf and blind, or of any such State hospital, or of the University of Virginia, or of the Virginia Military Institute, or of any other State institution, it may acquire the same by condemnation under the provisions of this act, and the proceedings in all such cases shall be according to the provisions of this act so far as they can be applied to the same.”

The contention of plaintiff in error is that the power of condemnation conferred by this clause is to be exercised in subordination to clause 3, above quoted; that the property sought to be condemned in this proceeding is a dwelling house in the town of Farmville, and that it cannot be invaded, or any space within sixty feet thereof taken, without the consent of the owner, except in the case of a railroad company.

We cannot give our assent to this construction of the statute. Looking to the whole of section 1105-f of chapter 46-b of Code, we think it plain that the phrase, “Any company chartered by this State, which is authorized by its charter or by the laws of this State to condemn lands,” has reference only to ordinary corporations chartered by the State, and has no application to those corporations which are denominated State institutions, which are part of the State government and were created for the purpose of performing governmental functions. Had the legislature deemed all chartered -companies, whether organized for private purposes and controlled by private individuals, as standing upon the same footing with State institutions, as hospitals, asylums, colleges and universities, it would [495]*495be wholly unnecessary to encumber the Code with clauses 24 and 25. Section 25 plainly confers upon the institutions therein referred to, in language which certainly comprehends the State Female Normal School, power to condemn “any land, buildings, structures, sand, earth, gravel, water, or other material necessary to be taken and used” for its purposes.

The word “building” is a most comprehensive one. In volume 1, Words and Phrases, it is said: “A building is defined to be a structure in the nature of a house built where it is to stand; as commonly understood, a house for business, residence, or public use, or for shelter of animals or storage of goods, and very generally, though not always, the idea of a habitation for the permanent use of man, or an erection connected with his permanent use, is implied in the word ‘building.’ In its broadest sense it can mean only an erection intended for the use or occupation as a habitation or for some purpose of trade, manufacture, ornament or use.”

Clause 25, therefore, confers upon the Normal School, in express terms, the specific power to condemn buildings, which includes dwelling houses, for its purposes.

But it is contended that the whole of this clause is qualified and limited by its closing sentence, which says that the property needed may be acquired by the institutions embraced within the clause, “by condemnation under the provisions of this act, and the proceedings in all such cases shall be according to the provisions of this act so far as they can be applied to the same.”

It is plain that the concluding sentence thus quoted has reference to the mode prescribed by the entire chapter for giving effect to the right which it confers. It cannot be that the legislature, in the same clause which confers an express power to condemn buildings, a term which includes dwelling houses, would prohibit the very act which it had [496]*496authorized. The limitation refers plainly to the procedure by which the rights are to be enforced; and procedure is defined to be the steps taken in an action or other legal proceeding; and proceeding

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Bluebook (online)
77 S.E. 489, 114 Va. 491, 1913 Va. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burger-v-state-female-normal-school-va-1913.