Pool v. Butler

74 P. 444, 141 Cal. 46, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 469
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1903
DocketSac. No. 1081.
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 74 P. 444 (Pool v. Butler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pool v. Butler, 74 P. 444, 141 Cal. 46, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 469 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

HAYNES, C.—

This appeal is from an order dismissing the action, made upon plaintiffs’ motion. The action was to condemn a strip of land 60 x 145 feet, for a ferry-landing on the Sacramento River, in Yolo County. There was a prior appeal from the judgment condemning the land for said purpose in which the judgment was affirmed (reported in 134 Cal. 621, entitled Pool v. Simmons). In that case the trial court gave judgment to the plaintiff, condemning the land to the burden of an easement for the proposed ferry-landing, and assessing the damages at $285. The defendants upon the trial reserved several exceptions, and moved the court for a *48 new trial npo-n all the issues, and the motion was denied. Thereupon said former appeal was taken from the judgment and from the order denying a new trial. Both the motion for a new trial and the appeal presented several questions relating to the regularity and validity of the proceedings and judgment, as well as the amount of damages awarded. The plaintiff deposited with the clerk the said sum of $285 and costs, within thirty days after the entry of the judgment. The defendants did not accept the money so deposited, but took and perfected their appeal, and did not abandon all defenses except for greater compensation, and could not demand or obtain the money until the appeal should be determined. Section 1254 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides, among other' things, as follows:—

“The defendant who is entitled to the said money paid into court as aforesaid, or upon any judgment in such proceedings, shall be entitled to demand and receive the same at any time thereafter upon obtaining an order therefor from the court.”

No such order was asked for by defendants. They could not get it without abandoning all the defenses they had to the action, except as to the sufficiency of the damages awarded; and such other defenses were not "abandoned, but were pressed upon the motion for new trial, and in this court upon the appeal. If they had applied to the court for an order directing the clerk to pay over the money, it could not have been granted pending the motion for a new trial, or at any time after the appeal was taken until the judgment was affirmed or the appeal dismissed. The court had no power to make the requisite order for the payment of the money, the judgment having been suspended by the appeal, which was a refusal to accept the money, or to treat the judgment as a final determination of the rights of the parties, though it was in form final. • Judgment in the court below was entered June 21, 1898, and the appeal was decided December 3, 1901, and became final January 2, 1902, a period of three and a half years after judgment in the court below. Such delay may have furnished in this case, and might in many others, sufficient reasons for an abandonment of the enterprise. During all that time defendants were protesting against the judg *49 ment, and when plaintiffs finally relieved them from what they insisted was a wrong, oppressive, and erroneous judgment by dismissing the proceeding, now appeal from the order relieving them from it. The ultimate question, however, is whether the court erred in dismissing the action.

The proceeding in eminent domain is an exercise of the sovereign power of the state, though the state does not appear upon the face of .the record as a party. The owner of the land sought to be appropriated to a public use may voluntarily agree with the agent of the state as to price, and convey it to the person or corporation who may desire it for a public use, but in the proceeding under the statute there is no element of contract. It is an adversary proceeding wherein the state appropriates the use of the land to the public, subject only to the requirement of the constitution that the land shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation having been first made or paid into court for the owner. (Const., art. I, sec. 14.) But a plaintiff seeking to condemn land for a public use does not, by bringing the action to condemn, bind himself to take the land and pay the compensation fixed by the court or jury, since it may be so great as to make the proposed use impossible, or the delay in obtaining the right to use the land for the purpose intended may permit another to acquire a competitive use of other lands for the same purpose, and thus make his use undesirable, even if the compensation were reasonable. Hence a plaintiff in such action is conceded to have a right to abandon the proceeding and decline to take the land, the question then being at what stage of the condemnation proceedings may he abandon the enterprise or decline to take the property? Pending the motion for a new trial, and later, pending the appeal, it is clear that plaintiffs were not bound to pay or deposit the damages assessed upon the trial; and it is equally clear by the motion and the appeal that the defendants refused to accept payment, at least until they had exhausted all their resources to defeat the condemnation, and during all that time the plaintiffs had the right to abandon the enterprise and refuse to pay the compensation assessed by the court. It is contended, however, that having deposited the money with the clerk of the court, they could not withdraw it, *50 and that upon the affirmance of the appeal the defendants were entitled to receive it. I think plaintiffs had the right to abandon at any time before the defendants were willing to receive it, or were in a position to demand it. Before the former appeal was decided plaintiffs informed defendants of their intention to abandon the establishment of the ferry, and that, if the judgment should be affirmed, they would move to dismiss the proceeding, and they withdrew the money deposited, except sufficient thereof to pay costs.

It is contended on behalf of appellants that the right of the defendants to the land, or the easement therein, vested in the plaintiffs by the deposit with the clerk, and that there can be no abandonment by the plaintiffs thereafter. But the deposit, I think, under the circumstances, was only a tender, and in such cases the money tendered does not vest in the person to whom it is tendered unless it is accepted. In this case the deposit was not accepted. The defendants persisted in their contention that the judgment was erroneous and invalid, and sought to have it reversed, and could hardly contend that the money or the right to it was vested in them so long as they contended that the plaintiffs had no right to the land. The vesting of the title to the deposit in the defendants is coincident with the vesting of the right to the land for the purposes for which it was sought, but pending the appeal the plaintiffs could assert no right to the land or its use under the judgment which had been stayed and suspended by the appeal, during which time the court was powerless to enforce it; nor could the defendants say, “The right to the money is vested in us, but you shall not have the land.” The title to the land does not vest in the plaintiffs until “the final order of condemnation” is made by the court, and a copy of the order filed in the office of the county recorder, “and thereupon the property described therein shall vest in the plaintiff for the purposes therein specified.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1253.) Counsel for appellants cites Los Angeles Ry. Co. v. Rumpp, 104 Cal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 P. 444, 141 Cal. 46, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pool-v-butler-cal-1903.