City of Cheyenne v. Edwards

143 P. 356, 22 Wyo. 401, 1914 Wyo. LEXIS 26
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1914
DocketNo. 769
StatusPublished

This text of 143 P. 356 (City of Cheyenne v. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Cheyenne v. Edwards, 143 P. 356, 22 Wyo. 401, 1914 Wyo. LEXIS 26 (Wyo. 1914).

Opinion

PoTTRR, JuSTICF.

This is a condemnation proceeding brought by the City of Cheyenne to acquire certain land alleged to be required for the purpose of constructing a dam and maintaining the same and a reservoir thereon as a part of a proposed extension and enlargement of the system of water works of that city. The case is here on error for the review of certain orders of the District Court having the effect of granting a trial by jury to determine the compensation to be made to the respondents as owners of the land, upon their written demand therefor filed after an assessment of the .compensation had been made and certified by appraisers, so-called, who had been appointed for that purpose, and after a rule or order had been entered, to which the respondents excepted, approving and confirming the certificate of the appraisers, reciting a deposit of the amount of the compensation, as so ascertained, in the county treasury to the credit of the respondents, and declaring that the lands, describing them, had been condemned and appropriated for the purposes aforesaid.

The question presented by the several assignments of error is whether the respondents, the defendants in error here, are entitled to a jury trial upon their said demand. Their right thereto was challenged in the District Court by several motions filed by the plaintiff on three grounds which may be stated substantially as follows: 1. That the statute under which the condemnation proceeding was brought and heard does not provide for or authorize a trial by jury. 2. [407]*407That no appeal having been taken from the rule or order confirming the certificate of the appraisers, and the time therefor having expired, the proceeding was thereby finally disposed of. 3. That if a jury trial might at any time have been properly demanded, the demand of the respondents was not filed within the period limited by law. The same grounds are urged in this court. Without describing more specifically the several motions of the plaintiff opposing the demand for jury trial, we deem it sufficient to say that the object thereof was to have the case dismissed from the trial docket, and the application or demand for jury trial dismissed or stricken from the files. It does not appear that all of such motions were ruled ón, but those considered were overruled and the order entered thereon shows that the court refused to dismiss the cause or strike the said demand of the respondents from the files; and by a later order made on motion of respondents for a change of venue the cause was transferred to the District Court in and for Platte County for trial before a jury. This last mentioned order is one of the orders here complained of, it being objected to on the sole ground that a further trial of the cause is unauthorized.

The controversy respecting the question thus presented results from the unfortunate jumbled and confusing condition of the statutes relating to the procedure in cases of this kind. The difficulty is in determining what statute applies. This proceeding was commenced by the service of the initial notice and the filing of the petition in September 1908. The order appointing appraisers was made October 24, 1908; and the certificate of the appraisers was filed, and the rule or order aforesaid confirming and approving it was made and entered February 27, 1909. The demand for a trial by jury was filed March 27, 1909. Some of the statutes necessary to be considered are referred to and the discrepancies between them pointed' out in Edwards v. City of Cheyenne, 19 Wyo. no, 114 Pac. 677, 122 Pac. 900. In that case the respondents, defendants in error here, were seeking to have the city and its officers enjoined from using [408]*408or occupying the premises here involved, claiming among other things that the proceeding brought to condemn the premises, the same proceeding now before the court, had been instituted and heard under a provision of the statute whicETdid tiot apply to the City of Cheyenne, or had been repealed by subsequent legislation if it had at any time applied to said city. It was held that the statute was, if in force, applicable to said city, but it was found unnecessary to decide whether it had been repealed by later legislation for the reason that the petition in the case did not sufficiently show that the condemnation proceeding had been brought and heard only under that statute, or that the rights claimed by the respondents under other provisions of the statute had been denied them.

When this proceeding was commenced the various provisions necessary to be considered were found in the Revised Statutes of 1899, with the exception of an act passed in 1907, which, as amended in 1909, is relied upon by counsel for the city in support of the contention that the demand for jury trial was not filed within the time allowed by law. All of the provisions aforesaid, including the act of 1907 as amended in 1909, are incorporated in the Compiled Statutes of 1910. Much of the confusion arising from a reading of the provisions as they appear in the Revision and Compilation, respectively, can, we think, be avoided and the legislative intention better ascertained by considering them in the order of their enactment and by reference to the several original acts. In the former case between these parties, above cited, it was contended that the condemnation proceeding had been improperly instituted and heard under the provisions of Section 2915 of the Revised Statutes of 1899, which is now Section 3831 of the Compiled Statutes of 1910,' and counsel for the city insisted that the provisions of that section had been continued in force and might properly be followed by the city in acquiring the land in question. That section as it appears in the Compiled Statutes reads as follows:

[409]*409“Sec. 3831. Whenever any water company or incorporated city or town of this State shall require any land., real estate, or claim, or right of way, for construction and maintenance of water works; or any land which may be affected by any operation connected with the construction or maintenance of the same, such water' company or incorporated city or town may acquire such land, real estate, claim or right of way, in the same manner as is provided by Section 3872, and said section shall be so construed to be as applicable to such water company, incorporated city or town as it is now applicable to road, ditch, or telegraph companies specifically named therein.”

The provisions thus quoted were originally enacted as Section 10 of Chapter 13 of the Raws of 1882, which was an act entitled: “An Act to enable the City of Cheyenne to provide a water supply for the inhabitants thereof, to extinguish fires, and for other purposes.” The act authorized the City of Cheyenne to either lease and grant for a term of years the exclusive right to construct and maintain a system of water works, to supply the city with water for the extinguishment of fires, and the inhabitants thereof with water for domestic, manufacturing and for other purposes, or, itself to construct, own and control the water system, and in that event to issue and dispose of a sufficient amount of bonds for that purpose, not to exceed the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars. These provisions appear in the Compiled Statutes in Sections 1393 to 1403, inclusive. It will be observed that Section 3831 refers to another section of the Compilation, viz: Section 3872, for the procedure in exercising the power thereby conferred.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 P. 356, 22 Wyo. 401, 1914 Wyo. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cheyenne-v-edwards-wyo-1914.