Heimbecher v. City & County of Denver

50 P.2d 785, 97 Colo. 465, 1935 Colo. LEXIS 340
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedOctober 14, 1935
Docket13,554
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 50 P.2d 785 (Heimbecher v. City & County of Denver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heimbecher v. City & County of Denver, 50 P.2d 785, 97 Colo. 465, 1935 Colo. LEXIS 340 (Colo. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bouck

delivered tlie opinion of the court.

This is a mandamus proceeding commenced in the district court by one Heimbecher against the council, the manager, and the auditor of the City and County of Denver. The court’s judgment dismissing the alternative writ is here for review.

The controversy between the parties reaches back to a suit instituted in 1926 by Denver to condemn, under its power of eminent domain, certain lands of Heimbecher’s. *467 This suit was in pursuance of a municipal program looking to flood prevention by straightening the channel of the South Platte river and constructing an embankment, or dike, along its banks. Others of the lands required were obtained through voluntary sale by the owners. Still other lands were taken by condemnation.

The first trial of the Heimbecher case resulted in a $20,000 jury verdict. The award based thereon was then brought here by the city, and we set it aside as excessive. City and County of Denver v. Tondall, 86 Colo. 372, 282 Pac. 191. At the second trial a jury assessed the damages at $8,050. Heimbecher, deeming this second award inadequate, asked this court to set it aside, but in due course we affirmed the judgment. Heimbecher v. Denver, 90 Colo. 346, 9 P. (2d) 280.

The mandamus proceedings now involved were begun by Heimbecher to compel Denver, through its appropriate officers, to pay the final award.

Denver resisted on the following principal grounds: (1) That the judgment against Heimbecher in previous mandamus proceedings of the Denver district court is res judicata as to the issues herein; (2) that the judgment upon the second trial of the condemnation suit was conditional, it being urged that no obligation attached thereto in view of no payment of the award ever having been made so as to render the judgment absolute; (3) that Denver had a right to, and did, abandon the condemnation suit and therefore no duty devolves upon its officers by reason of the judgment therein.

1. In our opinion the disposition of the first mandamus case did not render it res judicata as to the present one. In the former case, it is true, Denver was made a respondent, as it is in this; but it is clear that the purpose and scope of the two actions must be determined by examination of the pleadings and issues therein. From such examination it is readily apparent that the first case was radically different from the second. For instance, the mandamus then sought was to compel official action *468 primarily by Denver’s manager of improvements and parks, and only secondarily by its auditor in regard to the action of the manager. Moreover, it was directed against a special fund of the city’s treasury. There is no doubt that those original mandamus proceedings were properly dismissed. The manager’s duties and powers did not include the fiscal acts there attempted to be compelled at his hands. Furthermore, the special fund there relied upon was plainly not available. In short, there was no cause of action stated at all and the case was properly dismissed. The city contends that Heimbecher lost any possible rights by failing to present the adverse judgment to this court for review. A judicial review of the judgment there entered would have accomplished nothing. It was not a case where even the most liberal amendments could reasonably have supplemented the total lack of a cause of action.

A writ of mandamus lies only where the petitioner has a clear legal right to have the respondent perform a clear legal duty. Gunter v. Walpole, 65 Colo. 234, 176 Pac. 290; People ex rel. v. Butler, 24 Colo. 401, 51 Pac. 510. In the first mandamus case, neither of these requisites was present.

The case at-bar, in contrast with the preceding one, displays proceedings against the council, the mayor, and the auditor, and does not concern any special fund of the city. The reasons for selecting the particular respondents in the case are clear. The council is properly a respondent because, under the statutes governing the exercise of a city’s right of eminent domain, the council is the body which is to provide by ordinance for payment of awards, as will appear below. Inclusion of the mayor, who is the one that approves or disapproves of ordinances, is equally correct. The addition of the auditor, on account of his duties arising only after an appropriation has been made by ordinance, is likewise regular (his situation here being easily distinguishable from his position when linked with an official — like the manager of im *469 provements and parks — who has no power as snch over a municipal fund).

2. Having disposed adversely of the city’s defense of res judicata, we next consider the contention that the judgment in the condemnation suit is conditional. Doubtless in the ordinary nonmunicipal condemnation suit, the petitioner has a right to withdraw from it or dismiss it even after a judgment of award has been entered. Denver & N. O. R. R. Co. v. Lamborn, 8 Colo. 380, 8 Pac. 582. No one will contend that the title to condemned property vests in the petitioner before he has made actual payment of the award. That, however, is far from saying that under no circumstances does the property owner acquire any right whatever by the award until payment is made. The opinion of this court in the Lamborn case, just cited, employed language that seems to justify the unqualified rule urged by the city. But that language is broader than the situation which was then presented to us required, and must be read and limited in the light of the particular facts there before the court, and the law then in force. The Lamborn case was decided a quarter of a century before enactment of the 1911 Act hereinafter discussed, which now regulates municipal condemnation proceedings.

It would manifestly be unfair and unjust to subject the owner of property to the extraordinary power of eminent domain without ever terminating the period during which the petitioner in the eminent domain proceedings may continue supinely to refrain from his election whether to pay for the property or not. "When is that period to be deemed at an end?

The attitude of the city in this case, apparently based as it is upon a claim of right to prolong the proceedings without limit and then to nullify them by arbitrary abandonment, necessitates an answer to the question in so far as it applies to the facts therein. The contention which we are now discussing, as to the conditional character of the judgment, is so nearly related to the city’s *470 third argument, in regard to the alleged right and alleged fact of abandonment, that from now on we shall deal with them together in this opinion.

First, however, in order properly to appraise the concrete situation presented by the record, let us consider what has happened. Here was a definite municipal program of flood prevention work requiring the city’s ownership of a continuous stretch of land for about a mile along the bank of the river. All the owners except Heimbecher have received the purchase price of their respective tracts, some by mutual agreement, others upon condemnation.

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Bluebook (online)
50 P.2d 785, 97 Colo. 465, 1935 Colo. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heimbecher-v-city-county-of-denver-colo-1935.