State v. Bradshaw
This text of 117 P. 284 (State v. Bradshaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
It is provided in Section 6860, L. O. L., that an action for condemnation of land by virtue of the power of eminent domain “shall be commenced and proceeded into final determination in the same manner as an action at [283]*283law, except as in that title of the code is otherwise specially provided.” In Section 201, L. O. L., it is provided that “if the trial be by jury, judgment shall be given by the court in conformity with the verdict and so entered by the clerk within the day on which the verdict is returned.” The only provision varying this rule in action for the condemnation of land is found in Section 6866, L. O. L.:
“Upon payment into court of the damages assessed by the jury, the court shall give judgment appropriating the lands * * to the corporation and thereafter the same shall be the property of such corporation.”
The end to be attained in actions of this kind is not the recovery of the money but the condemnation and passing of the title to land. The payment of the money assessed as damages by the jury is a condition precedent to the judgment in favor of the plaintiff in such actions; otherwise, the action shall proceed as any other action at law.
Section 18, Article 1, of the State Constitution declares:
“Private property shall not be taken for public use nor the particular services of any man be demanded without just compensation; nor except in case of the State without such compensation first assessed and tendered.”
It is said in Section 4 of Article XI of the Constitution:
“No person’s property shall be taken by any corporation under authority of law without compensation being first made or secured in such manner as may be prescribed by law.”
• No provision has been made for merely securing compensation for taking property under the right of eminent domain, but it is provided in Section 6839, L. O. L., that “no appropriation of private property shall be made until compensation be made therefor to the owner thereof, irrespective of any increased value thereof by reason of the proposed improvement by such corporation, in the manner hereinafter provided.”
[284]*284It may be well said that under these provisions of the constitution and statutes upon the subject, the return to the writ furnishes a sufficient excuse for not rendering final judgment in favor of the plaintiff appropriating to it the land which it desires for its purposes, but it does not show any reason why some other final judgment should not be rendered. On the return of the verdict in the action for the appropriation of the land, the cause was ripe for judgment. If the plaintiff desired it to be in its favor as demanded in its complaint, it could have had the same by paying the money into court for the use of defendants. Then, too, as any other. action at law, if the plaintiff fails to meet the conditions precedent to judgment in its favor, a dismissal pf the action is among the- possibilities of the litigation. Section 179, L. O. L., defines a judgment to be “the final determination of the rights of the parties in the action.” In the language of Chief Justice Weight in Kramer v. Rebman, 9 Iowa 114: “At law the judgment is yea or nay for one party and against the other, and recognizes no liens, awards, nor execution against specific property, unless when the proceeding is in rem; but simply contains the conclusion of the law upon the facts proved, and leaves the party to his legal or appropriate writ or process to enforce it.”
The demurrer to the return is sustained with leave to the defendants to amend if they shall be so advised.
Demurrer Sustained.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
117 P. 284, 59 Or. 279, 1911 Ore. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bradshaw-or-1911.