State v. Messenger

6 N.W. 457, 27 Minn. 119, 1880 Minn. LEXIS 38
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 27, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 6 N.W. 457 (State v. Messenger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Messenger, 6 N.W. 457, 27 Minn. 119, 1880 Minn. LEXIS 38 (Mich. 1880).

Opinions

Cornell, J.

The statute whose constitutionality is brought. in question in this case, though published among the Special Laws, (Sp. Laws 1878, c. 191,) is clearly a public, and not a private act. Potter’s Dwarris, 53. Its purpose, as indicated both in the body of the act and by its title, was to legalize and establish, as a public highway, an old travelled road ■extending through several towns in Dakota county, which had been in use by the public for several years as a common highway; and all the provisions of the enactment are directed to that end. This fixes the character of the law as a public one, of which the courts must take judicial notice, and with the contents of which the defendant must be presumed to [122]*122have had knowledge from the time of its passage, when, according to its terms, it took effect.

It is objected that, in the enactment of this statute, the-constitutional requirement that just compensation shall be-first paid or secured, as a condition precedent to the exercise of the right to take private property for public use, has not. been observed by the legislature. In support of this objection, the following points are made: That the tribunal designated for determining the amount of that compensation is-not an impartial one; that no fund is provided and set apart for its payment, when ascertained, nor any adequate means provided for obtaining it; that the initiation of the proceedings for ascertaining the amount of such just compensation is put upon the land-owners whose property is taken-for the-road; that the time for instituting such proceedings is limited to sixty days after the passage of the law; that it is a private enactment, of which such land-owners are not presumed to have had any knowledge, and therefore its effect may be-to deprive them of their property without compensation, and without having had any opportunity to be heard upon the-question either of condemnation or compensation.

The law itself specifically locates the line of the highway,, and declares it to be “a legal and valid highway to all intents- and purposes, retaining the same road-bed as used by the-public, and repaired by the authority of' said towns [therein named] for more than ten years now past.” It further provides, in terms, “that any person claiming to be damaged by the existence of said road shall have the right, within sixty-days from and after the passage of this law, to present his-claim to the board of county commissioners of the county for said damages, and said board shall hear and determine the* same, subject to right of appeal to the district court of the-county of Dakota, and the person so appealing may do so within sixty days of the time he received notice of the decision of said board. Such appeal shall be taken by the service of ■ a notice thereof upon the chairman or secretary of said board,, [123]*123and the ease shall be tried in the same manner as appeals from justices’ courts are tried therein.” It will be observed by these provisions that the case is one in which the power of eminent domain was exercised directly by the state itself, and for a strictly public use and purpose. The passage of the law operated as an appropriation by the state of the lands over and upon which the highway was located and established. When the property of the citizen is thus taken directly by the state it is not essential to the validity of the law that it should provide for the initiation, on the part of the public, of the proceedings requisite to the determination of the just compensation to which such citizen may be entitled, nor for making payment of such compensation before the appropriation. The constitutional requirement that just compensation be first- paid or secured is satisfied in such a case if, in the act making the appropriation, an impartial tribunal is provided for determining .the question of compensation, to which the citizen may freely resort and be heard at any time, and if the payment of the sum to which he is entitled is made, whenever ascertained, a ehai’ge upon the public treasury, either of the state or of some municipal subdivision thereof, such as the county in which the highway is located. ' Cooley’s Const. Lim. 560, and cases there cited; Bloodgood v. Mohawk & Hudson R. Co., 18 Wend. 9.

The tribunal which is designated in this instance is a board of public officers, created under the general laws of the state, and acting under the obligations of an official oath. It is the same body which is invested by said laws with the general jurisdiction of laying out county roads within their county, and assessing damages occasioned thereby, and, according to the ruling in Bruggerman v. True, 25 Minn. 123, it is a competent and impartial tribunal for that purpose.

Their determination, however, of the question of compensation, under the present statute, is not final, but every owner of property taken for the highway may, within sixty days after [124]*124notice of such decision, appeal therefrom to the district court of the county, and have his damages assessed by a jury, and a judicial determination of his rights in respect thereto. He is not required to give any bond, but his right of appeal is absolute, and unfettered by any condition, except a reasonable limit prescribed as to the time within which he may bring it. * He is allowed to commence the proceedings before said board at pleasure, within the period of sixty days after the passage of the act, of which he is presumed to have notice, as it is a public and not a private law, as already stated. In doing this he is only required to present whatever claim for damages he thinks himself entitled to, and it thereupon becomes the duty of the board to hear and determine it as a claim against the county. Hence, whatever sum is awarded him for his compensation is awarded against the county, and the judgment on the appeal, if one is taken and tried, is also one against the county.

This is fairly implied from the law, and especially when considered in connection with the general road law of the state, which declares every highway located by state authority to be a county road, and under which all damages assessed on account of lands taken for county roads are made payable by the county interested; (Gen. St. 1878, c. 13, §§ 53-55;) for it is reasonable to suppose that, in the enactment of the statute, the legislature had in mind the General Statutes upon the subject, and that it intended to observe the general policy which they indicated. This construction is also called for by the -rule that requires every statute to be so interpreted, if possible, as to promote rather than defeat the evident purpose of the legislature in its enactment.

Thus construed, the security which is provided is adequate, for it rests upon the entire taxable property of the county. Neither the character of the tribunal, nor the security contemplated by the law, is open to any valid objection.' The remedy which is given to a party injured, for obtaining compensation, is also certain and adequate, and equally free from [125]*125objection, unless tbe time limited for the presentation of claims for damages is so unreasonably short as effectually to deprive him of any benefit from it. The power of the legislature reasonably to limit such time is undoubted; and what is a reasonable time is a question generally resting largely in the sound discretion of the legislature, in view of all the circumstances and exigencies leading to the particular enactment. Rexford v. Knight, 11 N. Y. 308.

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.W. 457, 27 Minn. 119, 1880 Minn. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-messenger-minn-1880.