City of St. Louis v. Butler Co.

219 S.W.2d 372, 358 Mo. 1221, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 579
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 11, 1949
DocketNo. 40868.
StatusPublished
Cited by112 cases

This text of 219 S.W.2d 372 (City of St. Louis v. Butler Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of St. Louis v. Butler Co., 219 S.W.2d 372, 358 Mo. 1221, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 579 (Mo. 1949).

Opinions

[373]

ELLISON, J.

This is a condemnation snit brought by the appellant City of' St. Louis to condemn for use as an alleged public street a strip of land forming a cuLde-sac and known as Edward Street, from the south line of Market Street to the north line of the right of way of the Wabash Railroad Company. Oh the defendants’, side of-’ the case only the Asphalt Company appears here. ■ At the outset it must be determined whéther this court has appellate jurisdiction of the cause under Art. Y, Sec. 3, Const. Mo. 1945, on one or another- of three theories, or whether that jurisdiction is in the St. Louis Court- of Appeals. These questions are:

(1)'whether the City was acting merely as a municipal corporation in 'bringing and prosecuting the suit, or was acting in its capacity as a 'county under Art. YI, Sec. 31;

(2) whether the title to real estate is involved within the meaning of Art. Y, Sec. 3;

(3) whether a constitutional question: was raiséd below and kept alive, so as to 'make this court the appellate forum under Art. V, S'ec: 3. Appellant maintains 'such a question was raised by its contention that the contemplated condemnation is for public use [which can be- done, tinder Art.'1, Sec. 26]- as opposéd to the respondent’s contention tha-t it is for a private use [which cannot be done, with specified' exceptions, under Art. 1, Sec: 28, and Art. XIV, Sec. 1, Oohst: II. S:]

1 This appeal was first lodged here in Division 2, and an opinion by Tipton, P. J. was adopted holding this court did not have appellate jurisdiction on either the first or second ground stated above. As to the third-ground, the opinion held that assuming but not deciding a constitutional question had been''properly raised' in the trial court, nevertheless it had not been preserved in appellants motion for new trial or in the,briefs here, in consequence of which it was not before this court. But inasmuch 'as ■ the opinion conflicted with certain decisions of,Division 1 and the court en banc as to the second ground, supra, the case was, transferred to the court, en banc to resolve these conflicting views. The appellant’s brief here stresses the third ground of jurisdiction, and since the opinion of Division 2 did not decide it, the cause was reassigned for a new opinipn to cover it, if - justified.

As to the first-ground; supra, we think it is clear that the City is "acting as a municipal corporation .and not as a .'county, in maintaining, this suit. Art. YI, S,ee. 31, Const. 1945 recognized St. Louis both as acity and as a county. But'this suit is based on its charter powers as a city. Nrt. V, See. 3, gives this, court appellate jurisdiction in civil cases. only .when the City is a party, in its character as a county. We therefore' hold that we have no appellate [374] juris *1224 diction on this first ground, and that the divisional opinion was properly ruled on that point. Superior Press Brick Co. v. City of St. Louis (Mo. Div. 1) 152 SW. (2d) 178, 179(2); Lovins v. City of St. Louis, 336 Mo. 1194, 84 SW. (2d) 127.

As to the second ground, supra, we hold the title to real estate is not involved, though it may be affected by the outcome .of the instant condemnation suit; and that the divisional opinion was properly ruled on that point under Art. Y, Sec. 3, supra. That ruling was based on Nettleton Bank v. Estate of McGauhey, 318 Mo. 948, 952, 2 SW. (2d) 771, 774-5(7, 8, 12), decided in Division 1, and Mo. P. & L. Co. v. Creed, 325 Mo. 1194, 1196(2), a unanimous decision, of the court en banc. , The latter adjudicated the exact-point and overruled four prior decisions3 of this court to the contrary. The reason given in one of these.-oyerruled' decisions, the. Moberly case, where an easement oyer land was condemned, was that the landowner’s right to the use and exclusive possession of the land was' either lessened or taken away, and his interest thereby affected.

The Creed case, supra, has been followed in three decisions. 2 One of them,.the Day case, held a condemnation suit prosecuted for the purpose of determining the amount of damages due the landowner, does not involve the. title to real estate except incidentally, unless the question of public use be drawn into the proceeding. And since shortly thereafter a line of eleven decisions3 has been rendered, holding that if the plaintiff’s power to. make,the condemnation is challenged in the suit, title to real estate is involved in a constitutional sense, and appellate jurisdiction will be in this court. The first of these decisions 3 was. the. Gordon case;-written by Ragland, C. J., who had also written the Day case just a month earlier. But the Gordon case cited no precedent. .

. The Richter case was not, based. on the Gordon case, but on the Tarkio case, 1 which .had been overruled in the Creed ease. The *1225 Mitchell, Thomas, Franklin Bank, School-District and Kirkwood cases, all followed the Gordon case, and held if the right to establish a public road is challenged [not necessarily on constitutional, but even on statutory grounds]’title is involved and- appellate jurisdiction-is in this court. The Palmer 'case held the condemnation- of a highway easement over land would directly take from the owner that much of his title, and therefore involve title, thus following (but not citing) the overruled Moberly case. 1 The--Hall and Welch eases followed the Palmer case. In the Union'Electric-cáse that company'claimed an award of $3150 damages in a condemnation proceeding on the theory that it owned the fee title- to the land condemned, and the court ruled" it was not entitled to the money because it "did not have any -interest in the land. Held:" title to real estate was involved;-and this court had appellate jurisdiction. - - • • - ’ '

All these decisions3 are wrong and should be overruled on the jurisdictional point, in "the opinion of- the writer. As held [375] in the Creed ease, quoting from the Nettleton Bank "case, the- title to real estate is not involved in any case in a constitutional sense- under- Art. V, See. 3, Const. Mo. 1945, and Art. YI;-See. 12,-Const. 1875, unless it be directly, and not collaterally, in issue. In-a condemnation suit the plaintiff does not dispute the landowner’s antecedent title.- ' On the contrary he affirms it. That is the reason the owner -is made- a defendant. The object of the suit is-to.subject the land as his to a public use by condemnation - undér our Constitution and statutes. True, a condemnation suit does take part- (or-sometimes all) of the landowner’s title and giyes it to the condemnor for just compensation. But it does not follow that the title is in. issue. It was always subject to that paramount right emanating from the Government.. The issue is on the right to take all or a part of a conceded title -in the particular ease and on the compensation to be paid.,. It is analogous to the enforcement of á lien. .

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Bluebook (online)
219 S.W.2d 372, 358 Mo. 1221, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-st-louis-v-butler-co-mo-1949.