Tayabas Land Co. v. Manila Railroad

250 U.S. 22, 39 S. Ct. 420, 63 L. Ed. 819, 1919 U.S. LEXIS 1707
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 19, 1919
Docket331
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 250 U.S. 22 (Tayabas Land Co. v. Manila Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tayabas Land Co. v. Manila Railroad, 250 U.S. 22, 39 S. Ct. 420, 63 L. Ed. 819, 1919 U.S. LEXIS 1707 (1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

A case of eminent domain exercised by the railroad company to condemn twelve small parcels of land in Lucena, Province of Tayabas, Philippine Islands, in accordance with the petition of the railroad company.

In accordance with the statutory provisions three commissioners.were appointed to hear the parties and inspect the properties. They subsequently reported that the parties had been heard and that they, the commissioners, had inspected-the properties and examined the same “inch by inch.” '

They made further detail of their proceedings, set forth certain causes for the increase in value of the properties in the four or five years preceding thé hearing, even before the coming of the railroad to the town “so that the value of land near Cotta was quoted at P2.00 up per square meter, according to the importance and situation of the land,” but' that the railroad had “undoubtedly greatly influenced the rise in the prices of the same lands.” They reported, however, that, taking into consideration all the circumstances, benefits to the railroad and others, they unanimously fixed the values of the pieces of prop *24 erty belonging to the parties who were first impleaded in the cause. These values it is not necessary to give nor to designate the properties to which they were attached, for the reason that the ownership of the properties, part before and part after, the rendition of the commissioners’ report, had become vested in the Tayabas Land Company.

In accordance with the report judgment was rendered in favor of the land company for P81,412.75, with interest at the rate of 6% from the date of taking possession of the land. .■

Motions for new trials were denied and the case was taken to the Supreme Court of the Islands by the railroad company, and that court modified the judgment by reducing the award for one of the parcels, containing 16,094 square meters, to the sum of P6,500,' and the damages for the remaining parcels were fixed at the same proportionate amount.

The land company says, however, that, “the prime question involved in this entire case is in its last analysis, one of value, that is/what is a. fair value o.f the land taken by the railroad company for. its railroad station at Lucena?” That, indeed, is the ultimate'inquiry, but it de-, pends, according to other contentions, upon the power of the Supreme Court over the report of the commissioners and to review and consider the evidence* In,.other, words, the weight that was to be given to the report of the . commissioners as a matter of fact and law under § 246 of the Code of . Civil Procedure of. the Islands and to the findings of the Court of First Instance under §§ 273 and 497 of the same code '

Section 273 describes the elements that must be considered in determining in a case where “the preponderance or superior weight of evidence oh the issues involved lies,” and § 497 provides for the extent of the power of the Supreme Court to review and .dispose of the cáse on ap *25 peal, and it is contended that the Supreme Court was bound., as the Court of First Instance was, to decide by the preponderance of the evidence determined in the same way. This may be conceded, and to 'what extent the Supreme Court satisfied the requirement of the section we shall presently consider after we have given attention to the more insistent contention based on § 246, which reads as follows:

“Upon the filing of such report in court, the court shall, upon hearing, accept the. same and render judgment in accordance therewith; or for cause shown, it may recommit the report to the. commissioners for further report of facts* or it may set aside the report and appoint new commissioners' ox it may accept the report in part and reject it in pa't, and may make such final order and judgment as shall secure to the plaintiff the property essential to. the exercise of his rights under the law, and to the defendant just compensation for the land so taken; and the judgment shall require payment of the sum awarded as provided in the next section, before the plaintiff can enter upon the ground and appropriate it to the public use.’’

It will be observed that an alternative power is presented, either to accept the report and render judgment in accordance therewith or to make other dispositions of it or upon it; the latter, however, in a very general way. And the absence of detail encourages and gives some plausibility to controversy, but it is resolved, we think, against the contention of the land company by the analysis of the Supreme Court of the section. The court points out, quoting the section, that it may “accept the report in part and reject it in part;” and it observed that that situation alone might limit the court’s power if it Were hot'also empowered “to make such final order and judgment- as shall secure to the plaintiff the property essential to the exercise of his-rights under the law, and *26 to the defendant just compensation for the land so taken.” A comprehensive power, we may instantly say, and one required to be exercised and adequate when exercised to pass upon and finally adjudge the designated rights. And it gives facility to the statute, substitutes for circumlocution and delay, directness and expedition, qualities that a' statute of eminent domain should possess.

The court further pointed out that the “'final.order and judgment’ are reviewable by this court by means of a bill of exceptions in the same way as any other 'action',’ ” and decided besides that § 496 of the Code was applicable. That .section gives power in the' exercise of appellate jurisdiction to “affirm, reverse, or modify any final judgment, order, or'1 decree of the Court of First Instance.” And this discretion, the Supreme Court in the present case decided, extends to cases of eminent domain and, where § 497 of the Code providing for motions for new trial had been complied with, it, the court, might “examine the testimony and .decide the case by a preponderance of. the evidence; or, in other words, retry the case on the merits and render such order or judgment as justice and equity may require.” The, final conclusion of the court was, rejecting the contention of appellants, that it had power “to change or modify the report of the commissioners by increasing or decreasing the amount of the award” if the facts of the case justified. And it .was the conclusion of the court that the facts so justified; and, after a review of prior cases, it rejected the contention that its conclusion was in conflict with them.

It will be observed, therefore, that the court considered that it was under the same obligation to determine the case by the preponderance of ..the evidence as was the Court of First Instance, and discharging its. obligation, that is, in determining upon the weight of the evidence, its estimate of the values of the properties taken by the railroad was different from that of the . Court of First Instance. *27

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250 U.S. 22, 39 S. Ct. 420, 63 L. Ed. 819, 1919 U.S. LEXIS 1707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tayabas-land-co-v-manila-railroad-scotus-1919.