Oklahoma City v. Shadid

1966 OK 189, 439 P.2d 190
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 4, 1966
Docket40974
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1966 OK 189 (Oklahoma City v. Shadid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oklahoma City v. Shadid, 1966 OK 189, 439 P.2d 190 (Okla. 1966).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an appeal by the City of Oklahoma City, hereinafter referred to as the *191 City, from a judgment of the District Court of Oklahoma County, rendered in a condemnation proceeding, sustaining the exceptions to the report of the Commissioners made in the proceedings, and pleas of denial of jurisdiction filed by the property owners, defendants in error, hereinafter referred to as defendants, and decreeing all proceedings to be void and dismissing the same. While the exceptions to the report of the commissioners to pleas to and the denials to jurisdiction set forth several distinct grounds, the sole questions tried and determined in the Court below seem to have been whether or not a public necessity exists for the taking of the land, and whether or not the land is being taken for a public use. The trial court held that the land was not being taken for a public use; and that no public necessity for the taking of the land existed. Therefore, the primary question to ' be determined in this appeal, is whether or not the land involved is being taken for a legally authorized public use.

The land involved is East of Portland Avenue and adjacent to Will Rogers Airport. It is located within an area designated “Aviation Related and Development Area” in the so-called “Master Plan” of the airport. The City contends that the taking of these tracts is necessary for the proper expansion, development, operation and management of Will Rogers Airport. The defendants, on the other hand, contend that no airport necessity exists, and that the land is being taken' for private purposes and for the benefit of private industry, rather than for public use.

Before the condemnation proceedings were instituted, a resolution declaring the necessity for acquiring the land was passed and properly approved by the proper city officials. This resolution was introduced in evidence. The reception into evidence of this resolution of necessity established prima facie a case of public necessity and the burden shifted to defendants to show such taking was not for a public itse. In Delfeld v. City of Tulsa, 191 Okl. 541, 131 P.2d 754, 143 A.L.R. 1032, we said:

“When, as is the case here, a municipal corporation is vested with the right of eminent domain, and in the exercise of such right begins proceedings to take the land by formally declaring the necessity for which it takes, and the use for which the proposed taking is to be made, the necessity of taking is determined, inasmuch as. the legislature, having granted this power to the municipality, has settled the question of necessity or expediency. This leaves only the question of whether the taking is for a proper public ttse. Other considerations are open to attack by other means, but are not a proper subj ect of consideration in the condemnation proceedings. The defendant could not properly raise the issue that the city intended to acquire this land for some other purpose. All he had a right to contest in the condemnation proceeding was whether the use to which the property was to be put was a public use.
“When the city, by resolution, declared the necessity for condemning this land, for a declared purpose it established a prima facie case of necessity, and the burden then shifted to the defendant to show that such taking was not for a public use.”

See also Bush v. Oklahoma City, 194 Okl. 504, 154 P.2d 960.

In White v. City of Pawhuska, 130 Okl. 156, 265 P. 1059, this Court held:

“The word ‘necessity’ in connection with condemnation proceedings does not mean an absolute, but only a reasonable, necessity such as would combine the greatest benefit to the public with the least inconvenience and expense to the condemning party and property owner consistent with such benefit.”

Ralph M. Ball, an engineer and member of a firm of engineers who were aviation consultants to the City and who had prepared the Master Plan for Will Rogers Airport for the City, in part testified in substance: That the intended use of the area shown on the Master Plan as Aviation Related & Development Area was for airport *192 «se and development. That it was intended to use the property for the development of airport facilities or facilities that were allied to the airport. That the presence of airport facilities helps support the airport because you couldn’t have the airport without facilities to support it. That all airport operations are lessee operations, and upon being- asked his opinion as a consulting engineer for the City, whether or not the property involved in the lawsuit was necessary for the operation of the airport and its expansion, he answered: “It’s definitely needed by the City as a protection from sound and encroachment.” The witness also stated: “The primary reason they need it is because they will need to protect themselves from suits and harassments from people that claim losses and abuses from sound, and to properly develop the airport.”

In our opinion, the record wholly fails to show any fraud, bad faith or abuse of ■discretion on the part of the City in attempting to take the lands involved.

Defendants urge that exceptions to report of commissioners and plea to jurisdiction •of the Court is the proper procedure to present the legal question of the right of plaintiff to maintain the proceeding in eminent domain and argue that plaintiff possessed no right to acquire by eminent domain or condemnation proceedings, the property of defendants, because the evidence showed the City was not seeking the lands for any necessary public use, but for private use and purpose, and cite in support of this contention, Kansas City v. Hyde, 196 Mo. 498, 96 S.W. 201, 203, 7 L.R.A.,N.S., 639 and City of Richmond v. Carneal, 129 Va. 388, 106 S.E. 403, 14 A.L.R. 1341.

In the Hyde case, the property owner contended that the condemnation proceeding was a proceeding to take his propertj' not for a public, but for a private use and the judgment of the lower court was reversed because it had failed to hear certain ■evidence offered by the property owner -upon this issue. In the City of Richmond case, the question involved was the constitutionality of a Virginia Statute authorizing cities in street opening proceedings to acquire land in excess of their need and to replat, sell and dispose of the excess. We do not regal’d either of these cases as controlling in the case at bar. The constitutionality of any statute is not involved herein, and the record does not sustain the proposition that Oklahoma City is trying to condemn land in these proceedings for a private purpose.

Without becoming involved in a philosophical analysis of the complexities and complications of modern existence, many things are now reasonably necessary for the establishment, maintenance and operation of a modern, up-to-date, municipal airport.

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Bluebook (online)
1966 OK 189, 439 P.2d 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-city-v-shadid-okla-1966.