Independent School District v. State

144 N.W. 960, 124 Minn. 271, 1914 Minn. LEXIS 509
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 9, 1914
DocketNos. 18,253—(27)
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 144 N.W. 960 (Independent School District v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Independent School District v. State, 144 N.W. 960, 124 Minn. 271, 1914 Minn. LEXIS 509 (Mich. 1914).

Opinion

Brown, C. J.

Proceedings under the authority conferred by chapter 258, p. 355, Laws 1913, to condemn a tract of state school land for the use and benefit of Independent School District of the city of Virginia, this state, for instruction and experimentation in agriculture. The land so sought to be taken being the property of the state, notice of the proceeding was served upon the attorney general as required by section 2524, K. L. 1905. The attorney general appeared at the hearing and moved for a dismissal on the ground, among •others, that the school lands of the state are not subject to condemnation for the purpose stated or otherwise, that the proceeding is •one to acquire rights in such lands contrary to the provisions of the state Constitution, to the effect that no state school lands shall be sold otherwise than at public sale, (section 2, art. 8, Const.) and, therefore, that the court is without jurisdiction to entertain the proceeding. The motion was denied and the state appealed.

1. We come directly to the principal question in issue, namely, whether a tract of state school land is subject to appropriation for educational purposes by a duly-organized school district in condemnation proceedings under chapter 258, Laws 1913, for all other [274]*274incidental questions are necessarily determined by a decision of that question.

2. The generally accepted doctrine of practically all of the courts is that the public lands of the state may be taken under the power of eminent domain only when authority to do so is expressly or by necessary implication granted by the legislature. The rule is particularly applicable to lands owned and in actual use by the state, or by some of its municipal subdivisions. It is also settled law that a general grant of the right of condemnation does not include state property, whether in actual use or not, or whether held in its proprietory or. other capacity, unless the state is expressly mentioned therein. State v. Boone County, 78 Neb. 271, 110 N. W. 629, 15 Ann. Cas. 487, and note. It is further settled that the municipalities of a state, including cities, villages, towns, counties and school districts, have no inherent power of eminent domain and can exercise it only upon express or implied legislative grant. 15 Cyc. 568. In this state the power has been conferred upon the municipalities named, and the purposes for which the power is here sought to be exercised is granted to school districts by chapter 258, supra. But- our examination of the various pertinent statutes has brought to light no provision expressly exposing state lands to appropriation in this manner. And our first inquiry is whether it has been granted by necessary implication. If so the absence of the express grant becomes unimportant.

It is clear that no such implied grant can be spelled out of any of the statutes of the state enacted prior to 1872. But the legislature of that year apparently recognized’ the right as an existing one, and by necessary implication it was granted by section 15 of chapter 53 of the laws of that year. That statute was amendatory of the then existing statutes • granting the general power, of eminent domain to certain public service corporations and prescribing the procedure thereof, and the amendment, among other things, provided, in respect to the notice of hearing that, “in cases where the enterprise shall be located through or upon school or University lands, or any other lands belonging to this state, such notice shall be served upon the secretary of state or his assistant, and the commissioners shall [275]*275award damages to the state, in like manner as to private persons or corporations.”

By this enactment, which is found unchanged in 2606, G. S. 1894, the legislature appreciated the fact that it might in particular instances be necessary to take state lands for some other public use, and for the purpose of protecting its rights in such a case required that the notice of the proceeding be served upon the secretary of state; and by the requirement that the commissioners assess damages to it in the same manner as to persons and corporations, not only recognized the right as of one of probable necessity, but by necessary implication granted the same.

The statute was in effect so construed in In re St. Paul & N. P. Ry. Co. 34 Minn. 227, 25 N. W. 345, where the amended statute was cited in support of the decision that university lands might be condemned for railroad purposes. The court held that since the land there involved was not used for the purposes of the University it was liable “to be appropriated in same manner as lands of private persons.” The distinction between used and unused state land was further emphasized in University of Minnesota v. St. Paul & N. P. Ry. Co. 36 Minn. 447, 31 N. W. 936. The distinction is in accord with the general doctrine that land already devoted to a public use cannot in proceedings in eminent domain, without express or implied grant, be taken for another and inconsistent public use. So that in the light of the act of 1872 and its application in the decisions referred to, the conclusion necessarily follows, as we view the question, that the right of condemnation of state land was granted by that statute by necessary implication. We so hold.

3. However, this does not solve the whole question, for the right so granted extended at the time only to railroad and other corporations entitled under title 1 of chapter 34, General Statutes, to take private property in condemnation proceedings, for it was an amendment of and had reference to that statute only. A separate condemnation proceeding was provided in nearly all other instances where the power was granted, and this is true as to school districts. Section 6, et seq., chapter 36, G. S. 1878, and section 3653, et seq., G. S. 1894. But those statutes were all repealed by the general re[276]*276vision of' 1905, and school districts, and other municipal corporations having no special charter provisions on the subject, were required to proceed under the general eminent domain provisions by the revised laws, the same being chapter 41. The revision embodied the substance of the act of 1872, and thus carried forward the implied consent to appropriate state lands to other public purposes. While some change in the language was made by the revision commission, there was evidently no purpose to .change the law in point of substance. As adopted by the revision the statute still required the state to be served with notice, and that damages be assessed to it for lands taken in such proceedings. This requirement was not expressed in the new law in the language of the old, but the provision that all land taken be assessed-to the owner necessarily includes the state where its lands are involved. It is manifest, therefore, that the revision commission intended to retain the old law in its substance, and it follows as a necessary consequence that the implied right to take state lands was carried forward and extended to all condemnation proceedings.

4. No special significance is to be given to the words “private property,” as found in the eminent domain statute, section 2520, .R. L. 1905. . Though the implied consent to take state lands is contained therein, the several sections of that chapter were intended as a statute of procedure in all condemnation proceedings, and not as one granting the right of eminent domain.

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Bluebook (online)
144 N.W. 960, 124 Minn. 271, 1914 Minn. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/independent-school-district-v-state-minn-1914.