Stillwater Bd. of Education v. Aldredge

1903 OK 65, 73 P. 1104, 13 Okla. 205, 1903 Okla. LEXIS 68
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 10, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1903 OK 65 (Stillwater Bd. of Education v. Aldredge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stillwater Bd. of Education v. Aldredge, 1903 OK 65, 73 P. 1104, 13 Okla. 205, 1903 Okla. LEXIS 68 (Okla. 1903).

Opinion

*206 Opinion of the court by

Burwell, J.:

The plaintiff in error condemned certain real estate in the city of Stillwater for a school house site, but failed to give the owner of the land any notice of the proceeding, and the court held that the failure to give such notice rendered the condemnation void; and in an action of ejectment the school board, having taken possession and erected a school building thereon, the appellees were awarded a writ of ouster. (Aldredge v. School District No. 16, of Payne County, 10 Okla. 694.)

After the decision by this court, the city of Stillwater became a city of the first class by incorporation, and the board of education again attempted to condemn the land in question, and gave notice to the owners thereof by publishing the same in a newspaper for four successive weeks, and by registering to their postoffice address a copy of such notice. After the school district had complied with what it conceived to be the express statutory provision for condemning a school site, the sheriff proceeded to execute the writ of ouster issued in the ejectment case; whereupon the school b8ard commenced this action to enjoin the sheriff from executing the writ, and from placing Aldredge in possession. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the petition and rendered judgment against the plaintiff for costs, and it brings the case here for review. The first question argued in the briefs is the necessity and sufficiency of notice to the land owner in the proceedings to condemn. The statute provides for no such notice. In the case of Aldredge v. School Board, supra, it was said in the syllabus:

*207 “When the legislature prescribes a mode by which private property may be taken for a public use, notice of the proceeding for condemnation must be provided for, to be given to the party whose property is taken or injuriously affected, in order that he may have an opportunity to be present and protect his rights, and in order to ascertain the proper measure of compensation to which he is entitled. If such notice is not provided for the law is void.”

It is also true that there is language in the body of the opinion which may be construed as intimating that notice might be given, although not expressly provided for in the statute; and authorities are cited holding that the duty to give notice is implied; but that question was not presented in the former case, nor was it intended to be decided.' In this case notice was given, but it was not required by the statute. The courts are divided as to what is the correct rule in a case of this kind. One class holds that no notice is necessary; that all there is in the right of eminent domain is the power to take private property for public use, and that no notice is necessar-y. In fact, the supreme. court of Kansas in a very recent opinion (Buckwater v. School District No. 42, 70 Pac. 605), held that a statute identical with the one now under consideration was not invalid simply because it failed to provide for notice to the land owner, and that notice was not necessary. Another class holds that, although the statute fails to provide notice, it will be presumed that notice was intended to be given, and any reasonable notice will be sufficient; and the next class lays down the rule that, unless notice is provided in the statute, none can be given that will bind the land owner; and that, as the owner is entitled to have notice in order to constitute “due process of law,” a statute which fails to provide notice is void.

*208 Alter a careful examination of all the authorities at our command, we are clearly of the opinion that the statute must stand or fall as enacted by the legislature; and that; where no notice is provided, a court ought not to say that notice is implied; and, as has been said by other law writers, the question is not what was done, but what did the statute authorize to be done.

'Recurring again to the necessity of notice; The position is taken by Mr. Lewis, in his work on Eminent Domain, that a statute which fails to provide for notice to the land owner is void; and his position is supported by a long list of authorities. We quote from his work as follows:

"Sec. 364. The great weight of authority is in favor of the doctrine that before a man can be deprived of Ms property for public use he must have notice and an opportunity to protect his rights. The supreme court -of Pennsylvania puts the matter very tersely and forcibly as follows: ‘The law abhors all ex parte proceedings without notice. Notice in this case to the owners of property was absolutely necessary. To take a man’s property and assess his damages without notice of it, is repugnant to every principle of justice, and such a proceeding is utterly void.’ The supreme court of Missouri, in one of the cases cited, says: ‘The constitution may not require notice to be given of the taking of private property for public irse, yet when the legislature prescribes a mode by which private property may be taken for such purpose, we will, out of respect to it, suppose that it did not contemplate a violation of that rule, recognized and enforced in all civil governments, that no one shall be injuriously affected in his rights by a judgment or decree resulting from a proceeding of which he had no notice and against which he could make no defense. Nothing would so much impair that just self-respect arising from the ownership of property fairly acquired, as the reflection that it is subject to be defeated by *209 others without notice to the possessor.. The times require that courts should be zealous in carrying out that great claim of government — the defense of men and their children in the employment of property acquired by their diligence, toil and labor. No man can cherish a warm affection for a government that suffers others without notice and behind his back, to seize and appropriate his property on occasions justified by no emergency/ Similar expressions will be found in most of the cases cited/’
“See. 365. The argument put forth in some of the cases cited in' the first section of this chapter, that the constitutional prohibition against depriving a citizen of his property without due process of law does not apply to the exercise of the eminent domain power, is wholly without foundation. The provision that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation, is simply an additional guaranty. The one provision is not exclusive of the other. Both may stand together, and both have full effect and operation in every case of the exercise of the eminent domain power. The one prevents the property of the citizen being taken under that power for any purpose except a public use, and then only upon making just compensation; while the other prevents his property being taken even for public use without due process of law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1903 OK 65, 73 P. 1104, 13 Okla. 205, 1903 Okla. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stillwater-bd-of-education-v-aldredge-okla-1903.