State ex rel. Galbraith v. McCutchan

96 S.W. 251, 119 Mo. App. 69, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 198
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 96 S.W. 251 (State ex rel. Galbraith v. McCutchan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Galbraith v. McCutchan, 96 S.W. 251, 119 Mo. App. 69, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 198 (Mo. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

An alternative writ of mandamus was issued at the suit of the relators against the respondents as justices of the county court of LeAvis county, commanding respondents to make and enter of record in due form an order that a certain public road be opened and established upon the relators’ first paying to the treasurer of Lewis county the ascertained damages to William H. Prentice and the proper costs, or shoAV cause against the command of the alternative AArrit at the September term, 1905, of the circuit court of said county.

A demurrer was sustained to the alternative writ and relators having refused to plead further final judgment was entered in favor of the respondents from Avliich judgment this appeal was prosecuted.

The alternative writ describes the course of the public road which relators desired opened, states facts shoAVing that LeAvis County Court had acquired jurisdiction of a proceeding to open said road, and at itsAugust term, 1901, had found that the probable expense of locating the road through the lands of Williams H. Prentice Avould [73]*73be $75, whereupon the relators deposited $75 with the treasurer of Lewis county to the use of Prentice, who was the only individual through Avhose.lands the proposed road would run who refused to relinquish the right of way for it; that on said deposit being made, the county court ordered the road commissioner of said county to survey and mark out said road, perform the other duties required of him by Iuaa7, and make a report at the next term of the county court; that the commissioner reported at the November term, 1901, of said court, showing the location and survey of the road, the lands through which it Avould run, that the right of Avay had been given by all land-owners except Prentice, avIio refused either to convey the right of Avay through his farm or agree on the amount of damages he would sustain from opening the road; that at the same term the county court found Prentice had refused to accept the amount deposited by relators (petitioners in the original preceeding to open the road) and said county court further found that said proposed road was of great public utility and appointed three freeholders to view Prentice’s premises and assess his damages; which having been done, the commissioners reported to the February term, 1902, of the county court a description of the tracts of land to be affected by the road and the damages assessed in favor of each one who had not relinquished the right of way; that said commissioners assessed Prentice’s damages at $275; that Prentice filed an exception to said report at the same term of court; whereupon the cause was continued to the May term, 1902 and Prentice’s exception was tried before a jury of freeholders and his damage assessed at the sum of $500. 'Whereupon it was ordered that'the proposed road be opened and established upon the payment by petitioners (relators in this proceeding) of said damages and costs; that thereafter Prentice took an appeal from said judgment of the county court assessing his damages, to the circuit court, Avherein there was a trial aneAV of his damage at the Septem[74]*74her term, 1902, of the court, before a jury, and a verdict was returned assessing his damages at the sum of $300; that thereupon it was ordered and adjudged by said circuit court that Prentice have and recover of Lewis county the sum of $300, together with his costs expended in his trial in the county court and that Lewis county recover of Prentice its costs expended at the trial in the circuit court, and that execution issue therefor; that Prentice appealed from said judgment to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, and at the October term, 1904, of the last named court, said judgment of the circuit court was in all things affirmed, except that it was modified so as to leave it to the discretion of the county court of Lewis county whether the damages and costs of opening the said road would be paid out of the county funds; that thereafter at the May term, 1905, the relators appeared before the county court, of which the respondents were judges, and applied to said county court for an order that said road be opened at the expense of Lewis county, which application was denied; that thereupon relators offered to pay all the damages and accrued costs in the cause, but the county court announced that under the opinion of the St. Louis Court of Appeals it was the duty of said county court to order the road opened at the expense of Lewis county or dismiss the cause and they had no discretion to order the road opened upon payment of damages by relators; that the county court arbitrarily ordered all proceedings in the cause dismissed ; that the offer of relators to pay the damages and costs does not appear on the record of the county court for the reason that one of its judges ordered the clerk not to make an entry of the .offer, wherefore affidavits were filed with the petition for the alternative writ of mandamus to supply said omission from the record. The alternative writ further alleges that the opinion of the St. Louis Court of Appeals did not take away from the county court its power to order the road’ opened if the relators would pay the damages and costs; that the dis[75]*75cretion vested in said county court to determine whether or not said road was of sufficient public utility to warrant its establishment had already been exercised and expressed by that court in its order that it would direct said road to be open upon payment of damages and costs by the petitioners (relators); that such finding and judgment of the county court rendered its duty to order said road opened upon payment of damáges and costs by relators a ministerial duty; that relators are now ready and willing to pay all damages and costs as a condition precedent to the opening and establishment of said road; wherefore the alternative writ ordered the county court to enter an order of record for the opening and establishment of said road or show cause to the contrary.

No suggestion against the jurisdiction of this court has been made in the present case, nor was any made in the case out of which it grew. [Galbraith v. Prentice, 109 Mo. App. 498, 84 S. W. 997.] Nevertheless, on reflection we are inclined to doubt our jurisdiction in the former case. The Supreme Court hears appeals in proceedings to open roads through private lands. [Bennett v. Hall, 184 Mo. 407, 83 S. W. 439.] The two courts of appeals have heard such cases too. [Aldrich v. Spears, 40 Mo. App. 527; In re Gardiner, 41 Mo. App. 489.] But if the contest on the appeal is over the right to take private property for a road, our opinion is that the title to real estate is so far involved that the jurisdiction is in the Supreme Court. In Galbraith v. Prentice, supra, the only matter in controversy in the circuit court was the amount of damages that ought to be awarded to Prentice; and though of course, his land would be subjected by the condemnation to an easement for the highway, it did not occur to us that probably this circumstance affected our jurisdiction.

Tbe present proceeding is of a collateral character and the judges of the county court are the respondents. That court misconceived the opinion delivered in Galbraith v. Prentice when it ruled that our decision left no [76]*76alternative but to order tbe road opened at the expense of the county or dismiss the- entire proceeding. No statement in the least suggesting such a thought can he found in the opinion, which recognized the third contingency, namely; the opening of the road at the expense of the petitioners.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 S.W. 251, 119 Mo. App. 69, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-galbraith-v-mccutchan-moctapp-1906.