Goergen v. Department of Public Works

243 N.W. 886, 123 Neb. 648, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 265
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1932
DocketNo. 28393
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 243 N.W. 886 (Goergen v. Department of Public Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goergen v. Department of Public Works, 243 N.W. 886, 123 Neb. 648, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 265 (Neb. 1932).

Opinion

Rose, J.

This is a suit for an injunction to prevent the state department of public works and its employees, defendants, from appropriating a strip of plaintiff’s land in Dakota county for a public highway without paying therefor or depositing with the county judge the amount of a 1,200-dollar award which appraisers made December 15, 1930, in a condemnation proceeding instituted by the department of public works before the county judge August 4, 1930. The facts on which the suit is based are stated in the petition for the injunction.

The state of Nebraska by the department of public works appeared specially in the suit for an injunction and objected to the jurisdiction of the court over that department. The employees named as defendants admitted that the department of public works applied August 4, 1930, for condemnation of the land described in the petition and pleaded that appraisers regularly appointed by the county judge August 4, 1930, made a conclusive award of $500 August 19,' 1930, after due notice to them and to plaintiff; [650]*650that the damages which plaintiff will sustain by the taking of his land for highway purposes were thus determined; that plaintiff did not appeal from the award of $500; that the amount of the 500-dollar award and the costs were duly paid by state warrant to the county judge for the benefit of plaintiff in November, 1930; that the alleged appraisement of $1,200 December 15, 1930, and all proceedings in the county court in the condemnation proceedings subsequent to the award of'$500 August 19, 1930, were void; that plaintiff prevented employees of the state from lawfully entering upon the land condemned for highway purposes. The reply to the answer was a general denial.

There were two appraisements of damages and two awards. The first or 500-dollar award was made August 19, 1930, by appraisers or commissioners appointed by the county judge. The second or 1,200-dollar award was made December 15, 1930, by appraisers or commissioners selected and summoned by the sheriff and afterwards appointed by the county judge. Both awards were made in the same proceeding on the same application of the department of public works. The county judge entered upon his records September 18, 1930, an order setting aside the first award as void, but he received by state warrant in November, 1930, $557.50, the amount of the first award and costs. Plaintiff rejected $500 as compensation for his land. The foregoing facts were shown without dispute. Plaintiff relied on the invalidity of the first award and on the regularity and conclusiveness of the second award from which there was no appeal. Defendants relied on the validity of the first award, from which there was no appeal, and on the invalidity of the second award.

The district court found the issues in favor of plaintiff and granted an injunction enjoining defendants from entering upon plaintiff’s land until the award of $1,200 shall have been paid. Defendants appealed.

In the supreme court defendants argued that damages for taking land for highway purposes, when not determined [651]*651by agreement, are ascertained by commissioners appointed by the county judge; that commissioners were so appointed in the first instance pursuant to statute on a sufficient application; that regular proceedings thereafter resulted in the valid award of $500, from which there was no appeal; that the award and costs were paid to the county judge; that defendants were entitled to enter upon the condemned land for the purpose of opening the highway; that the injunction was erroneously granted. These propositions require consideration of the statutes granting to the department of public works the power of eminent domain for highway purposes and prescribing the manner of exercising that power. The legislative grant contains the following language:

“For such purposes power is hereby conferred upon the department of public works to take, hold and appropriate so much real estate as may be necessary and convenient in the manner provided for appropriation and condemnation of real estate by counties for public use.” Comp. St. 1929, sec. 39-1403.

The county method of condemning land for public use was thus adopted for the department of public works. One section of the adopted statute provides:

“The damages which shall be paid to the owner by a county for any real estate taken as aforesaid, when not agreed upon, shall be ascertained and determined by commissioners who shall be appointed by the county judge of said county as hereinafter provided.” Comp. St. 1929, sec. 26-710.

This section does not confer on the county judge the unrestricted power of appointment. His appointing power is limited by the concluding phrase, “as hereinafter provided.” The section next following that quoted reads in part:

“The county judge of the county in which such real estate may be situated, shall upon the written application of either party, direct the sheriff of said county to summon three disinterested freeholders of the county, and not [652]*652interested in a like question, whose duty it shall be to carefully inspect and view the real estate sought to be appropriated, and who shall hear either party interested therein in reference to the amount of damages when they are so inspecting and viewing said real estate and who thereafter shall assess the damages which the owner shall sustain by the appropriation of his or her land.” Comp. St. 1929, sec. 26-711.

Prior to 1929, this section, referring to “freeholders,” contained the phrase “to be selected by said judge.” Comp. St. 1922, sec. 1019. The provision granting to the county judge the authority to select the three freeholders to be summoned by the sheriff was eliminated by the legislature. Laws 1927, ch. 56, sec. 3. The different provisions of the law as it now stands should be considered together and, thus construed, the county judge is without power to appoint or select the appraisers in the first instance upon application of the department of public works for condemnation of land for highways. According to the statutory method now provided it is the duty of the sheriff to select and summon three disinterested freeholders. Until this is done the county judge is without appointing power. Compliance with the statutory method is necessary to the taking of land for highway purposes without the consent of the owner.

The record under consideration shows conclusively that the county judge attempted to appoint appraisers August 4, 1930, before they had been selected and summoned by the sheriff as required by law, and that these were the appraisers who, August 19, 1930, made the 500-dollar award upon which defendants rely to justify their entry upon the land of plaintiff. For the reasons stated this award and the subsequent payment thereof to the county judge constituted no defense whatever to the suit for the injunction.

Defendants argued further that the county judge was without power to set aside the first award, since he exercised ministerial and not judicial powers in the condemnation proceedings. The determination of this question is [653]*653unnecessary, because the first award was void without any further action of the county judge or county court and afforded no defense to the application for an injunction.

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Bluebook (online)
243 N.W. 886, 123 Neb. 648, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goergen-v-department-of-public-works-neb-1932.