Kaschke v. Camfield

46 Colo. 60
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1909
DocketNo. 6053
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 46 Colo. 60 (Kaschke v. Camfield) 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
Kaschke v. Camfield, 46 Colo. 60 (Colo. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a proceeding brought by the appellee, petitioner below, against the appellants, respondents below, to condemn certain lands located in Sedgwick county, for a reservoir site, belonging to Wilhelmina Kaschke, in which action her husband, Henry Kaschke, was joined.

In strict conformity with every material requirement of the statute, it is set forth in the petition, definitely and specifically, that the petitioner has acquired part of the site and rights-of-way for an irrigation reservoir, under the act of congress of March 3, 1901, and is engaged in its construction; the authority of the petitioner in the premises; the ■purpose for which the property is sought to be taken, with a description thereof; the name of the owner; his inability and failure to agree concerning the compensation to be paid for it; with a prayer that the proper compensation he ascertained according to law. To this petition, the respondents filed a motion to dismiss, for these stated reasons: 1 — The petition of the petitioner sets forth no authority in the premises. 2 — Nor the purpose for which said property is sought to he taken. 3 — That said petition does not state facts sufficient to give this court jurisdiction. This motion was by the court overruled. Whereupon, the respondents, without more, requested a jury to assess the compensation to he allowed, which was duly impaneled and sworn, and in due course rendered a verdict in the statutory form, fixing damages at $500.00. Afterward, and on the same day, respondents filed a motion for a new trial, which motion was also overruled; whereupon a final judgment order was entered upon the verdict. [62]*62During the progress of the trial, and after the jury had been selected and sworn, and before any testimony was taken, the court ruled that the burden in proving damages was upon the respondents.

Counsel for appellants discuss three alleged grounds of error: 1 — That the court erred in overruling the motion to dismiss. 2 — That no direct proof was made by the petitioner of an attempt to agree with the owner as to the compensation to be paid for the land; and, 3 — That it was error to require the respondents to assume the burden in the trial of the case.

The sworn petition here shows that the reservoir to be constructed was to be used for the storage of water for the irrigation of lands, embraced in what is known as the Julesburg Irrigation District, located in said Sedgwick county. From this fact, counsel for appellants apparently assumed that the ' proposed reservoir belonged to the said Julesburg Irrigation District, and that the petitioner, showing no authorization from that organization to condemn said land, it is argued that he was without authority to institute and maintain these proceedings. This assumption of fact' finds no syllable of ■support in the record. On the contrary, the petitioner avers that he is engaged in the construction of a reservoir for the storage of water, to be diverted from the South Platte river, and used for the irrigation of lands, supplementing these averments with the fact that the lands so to be irrigated are located in a certain place, to wit, the said Julesburg Irrigation District. These are words merely of description as to location, and indicate nothing which, by the remotest possibility, warrants the conclusion that said district, as such, had any interest 'in the reservoir which the petitioner was then constructing. The averments of the petition show that the petitioner was seeking to [63]*63condemn lands for a reservoir site, which he personally, and in a private capacity, proposed to construct and use. That he might so do is beyond controversy. Section 1716, Mills’ Ann. Stats., provides:

“Under the provisions of this act, private property may be taken for private use for private ways of necessity, for reservoirs, drains, flumes or ditches, on or across the lands of others, for agricultural, mining, milling, domestic or sanitary purposes.”

All that counsel for appellants has said in reference to the alleged error in this ruling is beside the case, and the authorities which he cites in support of his contention have no application. We have no quarrel with the law as laid down in those eases; they simply are not in point here. The motion to dismiss was properly denied. The petition contained everything necessary to be stated to give the court jurisdiction, in conformity with the requirements of the Eminent Domain act. But for the gratuitous assumption of counsel that the petition means something totally different from that which it so well and clearly states, there would be nothing upon which to hang an argument in support of the motion to- dismiss. Since there is nothing in the record to uphold such assumption, and it being therefore wholly unwarranted, the argument based upon it of necessity fails.

The second ground urged as error requiring a reversal of the judgment herein, is that not only was there no direct proof by the petitioner of an attempt made to agree on compensation, but, on the contrary, that there was proof showing-, or tending to show, that no such effort had in fact been made. It is to be observed that this is one of the preliminaries which go to establish the right of a petitioner to maintain proceedings to condemn, just as the necessity for the taking of the land sought is a preliminary matter affecting such right. All preliminary [64]*64matters are, in a regular and orderly course, to be disposed of before a jury is called to assess damages; for,, unless tbe right .to condemn be first established, there will be no damage, hence no occasion for a jury. The jury comes for that single purpose, and for no other. That such is the case is settled by the express provision of the statute, which is in part as follows:

“Any party to any proceeding brought under the provisions of this act before the appointment of commissioners as in section six aforesaid provided, and before the expiration of the time for the defendant to appear and answer, may demand a jury of freeholders residing in the county in which the petition is filed, to ascertain, determine and appraise the damages or compensation to be allowed; such demand may be made in the pleadings, or by a separate writing filed with the clerk.” — Mills’ Ann. Stats., § 1721.

It may be, and doubtless is, true that an averment in the petition to condemn land, that the compensation to be paid therefor cannot be agreed upon by the parties interested, is jurisdictional, and therefore a necessary one; but, while this is so; the question of the right of the petitioner to maintain his petition is not for the jury, but was a matter with which it had no1 concern, because its sole function, as indicated by the statute, was merely to ascertain and report the compensation due the owner of the property sought to be taken. The question of the right to condemn is for the court, as a preliminary matter, and should be determined before a jury is called to ascertain damages and fix compensation. The property owner has the privilege of controverting the petitioner’s right to condemn, and when he does so, the burden is upon the latter to maintain his right by proper proofs; but where the owner fails to- make guch contest, in the [65]*65proper manner and at the proper time, the right in the petitioner to condemn will be deemed admitted, leaving the amount of damages to be awarded as the sole matter in dispute.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Colo. 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaschke-v-camfield-colo-1909.