Haynes, J.
This case comes into this court by appeal. It was heard by us last fall upon a motion, and after a very full and careful consideration of the question, realizing as we did the importance of it to the parties and especially the earnestness with which the parties represented by the plaintiff urged that the city was violating their rights, we made a decision upon the general questions- there involved and delivered an opinion [733]*733at the time as fully and as carefully as we are able. [Unreported.] Since that time there has been an amended petition filed setting up that certain things had been done in the probate court, making the Manufacturers Railway Company a party to this suit, and the case has come for hearing upon the evidence and upon the issues 'that have been joined. Testimony has been offered on behalf of the plaintiff, to which •objections were made at the time by counsel representing the railway company and the city, and we took it subject to their objections with the right to them to move to rule out, for the purpose of enabling us to investigate the question before we should rule upon it.
The case stands something like this.: A petition was filed for the appropriation of the property in question and the matter was pending in the probate court, service having been obtained upon the persons' who were named parties to the suit. The plaintiff then filed his petition in this court — perhaps first in the common plea© and then brought it into this ■court — and set up that there was some collusion between the plaintiff and defendant, and set up that the city was violating its powers in that it was permitting or consenting that the railway company might pass through the property in question, it being park property; that it was already subject to one public use and could not be subjected to another, and that case came on for hearing on a motion for an injunction and the injunction was refused.
The parties then went into the probate court, as appears by the supplementary petition, and proceeded with this appropriation, and the record of the appropriation shows that the case came on first for hearing upon the petition of the railway company, in which it had ©et up the usual allegations, that it was necessary for it to have this property for the uses and purposes of the corporation, and setting up that the parties were unable to agree in regard to the price, etc., and then set up matters necessary to be set up and found by the court before the parties proceeded with the appropriation of the .property and the assessment of its value.
Having done that, an amendment was filed to the petition in which it set up that there were certain things that they did not [734]*734■desire; that there were certain things that the railway company would do and would not do in relgard to the property.
Thereupon a jury was waived as between the parties to the suit and the matter was submitted to the court, and upon the •evidence and the admissions of the parties and upon their agreement, perhaps, the amount and value of the property was assessed at a certain sum, I think $5,000.00, and the usual order was made in regard thereto. ■ The corporation paid the money and proceeded to take possession of the property and •occupied it for railroad purposes.
Now, in regard to the original question of the right of the railway company to appropriate this property, we are content with the decision which we have already made and with that statement of our views in regard to that question. We endeavored to state them fully and at lengh and could do no more than restate them if we undertook it here. We find that the probate court had jurisdiction to hear and determine the questions that were presented by the railway company to it, a® to its rights to appropriate the property, as to the necessity for its appropriating the property, and having found that and other jurisdictional issues, and that the probate court had jurisdiction of the parties, we think it follows, and so thought at the time the evidence was offered, (following, as we understand the decision of the Supreme Court) that so having that jurisdiction the questions involved in the case, after and from that time, were subject to the jurisdiction of that court, and that the finding of that court is final upon the questions unless they are taken up in the ordinary way by error and that they cannot be collaterally inquired into in an action of this kind.
The case of Cincinnati, S. & C. R. R. v. Belle Centre, in 48 Ohio St., 273, is a case where the decision is made, as we think, for in that case the village of Belle Centre had undertaken to appropriate certain lands which belonged to the railroad company, for the uses and purposes of the village, I believe for the purpose of building upon them a village prison, and the railroad company there defended upon the ground that the property belonged to it and was acquired by it for the purposes of a railroad, and that it was necessary for the [735]*735. uses and purposes of the railroad, and that the village had no-right to appropriate it. It also alleged that it had never been served with process or made a party to the suit in any manner or form, and the company was brought in, I believe, by publication, while it was a domestic corporation. The Supreme Court -held, that the court having been invested under the constitution and laws of the state of Ohio, with authority to hear these questions, it being a court of record and having a right to pass upon the question of the service of the corporation and its jurisdiction, that the decision of that court in that respect and upon the questions arising thereunder, was final and conclusive and could not be collaterally impeached in the case before the court, and that case, I believe, was an injunction suit as in this case.
It follows, therefore, that the testimony that was offered for the purpose of showing that this would be an injury to the city, that it could not be done, and various matters offered' in the case in the oral testimony, should not have been received, and if the defendant desires to renew its application to have the testimony stricken out, it will be so ordered by the court.
It is claimed, however, that it appears in the case that at some time during the case there was some consent .between the parties; that there was an agreement as to the price to be paid. Upon examination, the record shows that the main questions were decided first and the questions which gave to the court jurisdiction to hear and determnie the question of the amount of damages, that is to say, it has arrived at that point where ordinarily a jury should be called for the purpose-of assessing- the damages, but the party who had the right to-have the value of its property assessed by a .jury waived that, as did the other party, and consented that it should be heard' by the court and if consented and agreed that a certain amount might be received by the way of compensation. W-e can see no error in this; there is no question but that, at that stage of the proceedings, the authorities had a right to do what they were doing, if they did it in good faith and doing-as they ordinarily and probably would in obtaining from the railway company the largest sum that they could, or an amount, at least, that they thought was full compensation for the damageá.
[736]*736The question was argued somewhat before us as to whether this plaintiff should not have the right to enjoin here because he had no right to make objections in probate court.
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Haynes, J.
This case comes into this court by appeal. It was heard by us last fall upon a motion, and after a very full and careful consideration of the question, realizing as we did the importance of it to the parties and especially the earnestness with which the parties represented by the plaintiff urged that the city was violating their rights, we made a decision upon the general questions- there involved and delivered an opinion [733]*733at the time as fully and as carefully as we are able. [Unreported.] Since that time there has been an amended petition filed setting up that certain things had been done in the probate court, making the Manufacturers Railway Company a party to this suit, and the case has come for hearing upon the evidence and upon the issues 'that have been joined. Testimony has been offered on behalf of the plaintiff, to which •objections were made at the time by counsel representing the railway company and the city, and we took it subject to their objections with the right to them to move to rule out, for the purpose of enabling us to investigate the question before we should rule upon it.
The case stands something like this.: A petition was filed for the appropriation of the property in question and the matter was pending in the probate court, service having been obtained upon the persons' who were named parties to the suit. The plaintiff then filed his petition in this court — perhaps first in the common plea© and then brought it into this ■court — and set up that there was some collusion between the plaintiff and defendant, and set up that the city was violating its powers in that it was permitting or consenting that the railway company might pass through the property in question, it being park property; that it was already subject to one public use and could not be subjected to another, and that case came on for hearing on a motion for an injunction and the injunction was refused.
The parties then went into the probate court, as appears by the supplementary petition, and proceeded with this appropriation, and the record of the appropriation shows that the case came on first for hearing upon the petition of the railway company, in which it had ©et up the usual allegations, that it was necessary for it to have this property for the uses and purposes of the corporation, and setting up that the parties were unable to agree in regard to the price, etc., and then set up matters necessary to be set up and found by the court before the parties proceeded with the appropriation of the .property and the assessment of its value.
Having done that, an amendment was filed to the petition in which it set up that there were certain things that they did not [734]*734■desire; that there were certain things that the railway company would do and would not do in relgard to the property.
Thereupon a jury was waived as between the parties to the suit and the matter was submitted to the court, and upon the •evidence and the admissions of the parties and upon their agreement, perhaps, the amount and value of the property was assessed at a certain sum, I think $5,000.00, and the usual order was made in regard thereto. ■ The corporation paid the money and proceeded to take possession of the property and •occupied it for railroad purposes.
Now, in regard to the original question of the right of the railway company to appropriate this property, we are content with the decision which we have already made and with that statement of our views in regard to that question. We endeavored to state them fully and at lengh and could do no more than restate them if we undertook it here. We find that the probate court had jurisdiction to hear and determine the questions that were presented by the railway company to it, a® to its rights to appropriate the property, as to the necessity for its appropriating the property, and having found that and other jurisdictional issues, and that the probate court had jurisdiction of the parties, we think it follows, and so thought at the time the evidence was offered, (following, as we understand the decision of the Supreme Court) that so having that jurisdiction the questions involved in the case, after and from that time, were subject to the jurisdiction of that court, and that the finding of that court is final upon the questions unless they are taken up in the ordinary way by error and that they cannot be collaterally inquired into in an action of this kind.
The case of Cincinnati, S. & C. R. R. v. Belle Centre, in 48 Ohio St., 273, is a case where the decision is made, as we think, for in that case the village of Belle Centre had undertaken to appropriate certain lands which belonged to the railroad company, for the uses and purposes of the village, I believe for the purpose of building upon them a village prison, and the railroad company there defended upon the ground that the property belonged to it and was acquired by it for the purposes of a railroad, and that it was necessary for the [735]*735. uses and purposes of the railroad, and that the village had no-right to appropriate it. It also alleged that it had never been served with process or made a party to the suit in any manner or form, and the company was brought in, I believe, by publication, while it was a domestic corporation. The Supreme Court -held, that the court having been invested under the constitution and laws of the state of Ohio, with authority to hear these questions, it being a court of record and having a right to pass upon the question of the service of the corporation and its jurisdiction, that the decision of that court in that respect and upon the questions arising thereunder, was final and conclusive and could not be collaterally impeached in the case before the court, and that case, I believe, was an injunction suit as in this case.
It follows, therefore, that the testimony that was offered for the purpose of showing that this would be an injury to the city, that it could not be done, and various matters offered' in the case in the oral testimony, should not have been received, and if the defendant desires to renew its application to have the testimony stricken out, it will be so ordered by the court.
It is claimed, however, that it appears in the case that at some time during the case there was some consent .between the parties; that there was an agreement as to the price to be paid. Upon examination, the record shows that the main questions were decided first and the questions which gave to the court jurisdiction to hear and determnie the question of the amount of damages, that is to say, it has arrived at that point where ordinarily a jury should be called for the purpose-of assessing- the damages, but the party who had the right to-have the value of its property assessed by a .jury waived that, as did the other party, and consented that it should be heard' by the court and if consented and agreed that a certain amount might be received by the way of compensation. W-e can see no error in this; there is no question but that, at that stage of the proceedings, the authorities had a right to do what they were doing, if they did it in good faith and doing-as they ordinarily and probably would in obtaining from the railway company the largest sum that they could, or an amount, at least, that they thought was full compensation for the damageá.
[736]*736The question was argued somewhat before us as to whether this plaintiff should not have the right to enjoin here because he had no right to make objections in probate court. I have not given the matter a great deal of attention, but I doubt, very much whether a party would be allowed to come in and intervene in that court in a case of that kind. It is true that, in cases where a petition in error or appeal should have been prosecuted by a corporation, and they have refused to so proceed, members have been permitted to file petitions in error,, being interested in the subject-matter of the suit, but in a case of this kind, where the whole matter is represented by the corporate authorities, it seems to us that a different rule might prevail.
I know when they were establishing the street railways here- and if was sought to lay down a track through Huron street, from Adams' to Bush streets, parties undertook to enjoin the-city and a suit was brought by Mr. Simmons for that purpose. .[See Simmons v. Toledo, 5 C. C., 124.] It was held that Mr. Simmons not being a property owner on the street, though a-citizen of the town and interested in the public streets, had no-right to come in by the way of injunction and seek to restrain a corporation from passing through that street after it had' obtained consent from the city counsel. Thereupon a suit was brought by his wife [See Simmons v. Toledo, 8 C. C. 535], who owned, property on the street, and a decision was-rendered in favor of the railway company, which, upon being-taken to the Supreme Court, was affirmed by that court.
For -that reason, I' have doubted in my mind whether any other party would have a right to come in, any citizen. However, I do not think that is material to the decision of this case. I think the real and the only question here for us to pass upon at this time .in this case Is, whether or not that court- had' jurisdiction of the property, jurisdiction to inquire into the-question whether the corporation -had the right to take that property, whether it had a right to subject it to the uses and. purposes of a railroad, alhougK it had before that time been, as it was said, established and appropriated to the uses and purpose of a public park. After a very careful .consideration of that question we have decided that the probate court. Had that jurisdiction, and that its action upon those questions-[737]*737cannot be enquired into in that action; cannot be collaterally impeached or enquired into.
Kinney & Newton, for Plaintiff.
M. R. Braüey, City Solicitor, and King & Tracy, for Defendants.