Smith v. City of St. Paul

111 F. 308, 49 C.C.A. 357, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4381
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 14, 1901
DocketNo. 1,489
StatusPublished

This text of 111 F. 308 (Smith v. City of St. Paul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. City of St. Paul, 111 F. 308, 49 C.C.A. 357, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4381 (8th Cir. 1901).

Opinion

THAYER, Circuit Judge.

This was an action by Josephine M. Smith, the plaintiff in error, against the city of St. Paul, the defendant in error, to recover the sum of $2,650, which had been ^.warded to Howard L. Smith, the plaintiff’s assignor, in certain condemnation proceedings, as compensation for a strip of land 30 feet wide lying on the easterly side and immediately in front of lots 7, 8, 9, and 10 of block 68 of West St. Paul, as said block was origin[309]*309ally platted. At the date of the condemnation proceedings in question the strip of land in question was being used by the public as a street. To the complaint which was filed by the plaintiff the defendant' city interposed an answer, which answer contained a plea that tiie plaintiff was barred of her right to recover by a former adjudication. The plaintiff demurred to the plea of res judicata, but it was overruled, whereupon a judgment was entered in favor of the city; the plaintiff having declined to plead further. The question to be determined by this court, therefore, is whether the defense of res judicata which was'interposed by the city was properly sustained.

The' plea aforesaid and the various records which were attached thereto as exhibits disclose substantially the following facts: Prior to the institution of the present action in the federal court, and on November u, 1895, the plaintiff, Josephine M. Smith, as assignee of Howard I/. Smith, filed a complaint, based, on the very same demand which is sued upon in the present action, against the city oí St. Paul, in the district court of Ramsey county, state of Minnesota. The city appeared and answered the complaint in the state court, alleging, in substance, that the condemnation proceedings under which tiie plaintiff claimed were utterly void, and that the award made therein in favor of the plaintiff’s assignor was utterly void and made without jurisdiction. Thereafter two other persons, namely, Lucrctia P. Sache and the St. Paul Trust Company, a corporation, intervened in the case, claiming the fund awarded in the condemnation proceedings, adversely to the plaintiff, and denying her right thereto. To these intervening complaints the plaintiff filed answers, and thereafter the case was duly tried in the district court of Ramsey county, Minn., resulting at first in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the city of St. Paul for the sum demanded by her, and in a further judgment that the interveners were not eu - titled to relief, and that their intervening complaints be dismissed, 'file interveners filed a motion for a new trial, but it was overruled; and from this order the interveners prosecuted an appeal to the supreme court of the state of Minnesota, which latter court adjudged that the order overruling the interveners’ application for a new trial be affirmed, “but without prejudice, and with leave to appellants to apply to the court below to modify its conclusions of law and order for judgment in accordance with this opinion, or grant a new trial, if in its discretion it should see fit to do either.” Smith v. City of St. Paul, 69 Minn. 276, 280, 72 N. W. 104, 210. On receipt of the mandate from the supreme court, the district court, on motion of the interveners, permitted them to amend their prayer for relief, and thereupon the district court modified its conclusions1 of law to the following effect: “That plaintiff is not entitled to any relief. Said interveners are entitled to judgment that said plaintiff take nothing by this action, and for a dismissal thereof on the merits.” A judgment was entered "in accordance with this order, from which no appeal has been taken. This latter judgment was entered prior to the institution of the case at bar.

The foregoing facts are disclosed by the defendant’s plea of res [310]*310judicata, and, as a matter of course, were confessed by the demurrer. But as the opmio’n of the supreme court of the state of Minnesota was made an exhibit to the defendant’s plea, and formed a part thereof, it will be proper to refer briefty to some of the facts* recited in the opinion of that court on which its judgment was based. When the city of St. Paul sought to condemn the strip of land in controversy for street purposes, it was in use by the public as a street, and bounded block 68 of West St. .Paul on the east. The strip was shown on the recorded plat of block 68 as a street, but the parties who filed said plat had no, title thereto. In reality the strip of land in question belonged to a man by the name of Bell, who owned a considerable tract east of block 68, and had platted said tract as “Bell’s Addition to West St. Paul.” Bell’s plat, as filed, did not include the 30-foot strip, however; and, in ignorance of his ownership of the same, he donated another strip 40 feet wide as a street, which lay immediately to the east of the 30-foot strip, which donation or dedication was shown by his plat. On discovering his ownership of the 30-foot strip, Bell filed an additional plat, which embraced both the 30-foot strip and the 40-foot strip, terming the same “Bell’s Second Addition to West St. Paul.” Subsequently one Rothhausen, who owned block 68, acquired title from Bell to the 30-foot strip' in front of block 68. Thereafter Rothhausen conveyed lot 7 of block 68 to Iyucretia F. Barrett, who has since become Tucretia F. Sache, one of the interveners, describing the lot so conveyed by reference to the recorded plat of block 68 in such a way as to estop himself and those who are privy with him in estate from denying that said lot 7 fronted on a public street 30 feet wide, as was shown b,y the recorded plat of block 68. Subsequently Rothhausen conveyed lots 8, 9, and 10 of block 68, except the westerly 40 feet of lots 9 and 10, to Peter Hansen, and Hansen’s title thereto subsequently became well vested in the St. Paul Trust Company. While Hansen was the owner of lots 8, 9, and 10, he brought an action of ejectment against the city of St. Paul to recover the 30-foot strip of land lying in front of block 68, which was then used as a street, and on the trial of said action recovered a judgment against the city for the possession of the land sued for. After the recovery of this judgment in ejectment the city appears to have instituted proceedings to condemn the strip of land in controversy, and in the course of such proceedings the sum of $2,650 was awarded to Howard L. Smith, the plaintiff’s assignor, inasmuch as he claimed to have succeeded to all of Hansen’s right, title, and interest in the 30-foot strip of land which Hansen had recovered in the ejectment suit. The supreme court of the state of Minnesota, while conceding, apparently, that the city of St. Paul was estopped by the judgment in the ejectment suit from claiming that the 30-foot strip of land in question was a public street, nevertheless held that no such estoppel existed as against the interveners, Lucretia F. Sache and the St. Paul Trust Company; that they, not having been parties to the*suit in ejectment, were entitled to assert that Rothhausen, by his conveyance to one of the interveners of lot 7 of block 68, and by the references therein made to the recorded plat of block 68 of West St. Paul, ratified said plat, and [311]*311dedicated the 30-foot strip as a public street; that all persons in privity with him, including Hansen and the plaintiff, were bound by such ratification and dedication; that the interveners had a right to use the 30-foot strip as a public street; that their rights as abutting proprietors were distinct and different from the rights of the general public; and that, as taxpayers who were not estopped by the judgment in the ejectment suit against the city, they had the right to object to the payment of the award by the city.

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Related

Smith v. City of St. Paul
72 N.W. 104 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1897)

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Bluebook (online)
111 F. 308, 49 C.C.A. 357, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-city-of-st-paul-ca8-1901.