White v. City of Charleston

126 S.E. 705, 98 W. Va. 143, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 24
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1925
DocketC. C. No. 338.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 126 S.E. 705 (White v. City of Charleston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. City of Charleston, 126 S.E. 705, 98 W. Va. 143, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 24 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

Lively, PResident:

The declaration is in case for damages to plaintiff’s lot of land, caused by defendant in lowering the grade of the street on which it abutted.

Defendant filed a special plea in bar to which plaintiff demurred. The trial court sustained the demurrer and certified its ruling for review.

The plea is to the effect that defendant, before it undertook to improve the street on which plaintiff’s property abutted *145 served upon her a notice embodying a resolution passed by the council declaring- the necessity of permanently improving the street “as required by law” and the date set for the hearing of property owners with reference thereto; and thereafter an ordinance was introduced and passed by the city council providing for the improvement, and subsequently a contract was let for the work and the improvement duly made in accordance with the plans, specifications, and profile prepared therefor, “as required by law”; that defendant did not at any time before the introduction and passage of the ordinance or prior to the paving and improvement file with the council any statement of damages which, in her opinion, she would sustain by reason of said improvement.

Evidently the plea relies upon and sets up the act of the legislature in granting to defendant its municipal charter, and the expression “as required by law” refers to that act, although it is not pleaded; and we have held in Groves v. County Court, 42 W. Va. 587, that this court will take judicial notice of all such acts and resolutions of the legislature, though local and private, ad appear to have been relied upon in the court below. The briefs also refer to the “charter” of the Sity and the argument is based on the constitutionality of the provision thereof. So we have searched for and found the charter act and its various amendments. The Act, by See. 63 (Chap. 1, Acts 1915 Municipal Charters), among other things, provides that whenever it is deemed expedient to improve a street to be paid for in whole or in part by special assessment the council shall so declare by resolution, and shall have on file for the inspection of all persons interested specifications, estimates and profiles showing the proposed grade after completion with reference to the abutting property. The resolution is then published once a week for two successive weeks in two newspapers of opposite politics published in the city. By Sec. 67 it is provided that at the■ expiration of the time for the giving and publication of the notices as provided m Sec. 64 the council shall determine whether it will make the contemplated improvement, and if so, by the passage of an ordinance setting" out in detail the street to be improved, the character of the improvement, the plans, specifications, pro *146 files, estimates and the like, and setting forth the lots and lands abutting thereon, in a designated manner. Sec. 64 requires a notice of the resolution embodying it to be served on the owner of each piece of property to be assessed, or if the owner be a ■non-resident or not found, substituted service of' the notice shall be by publication.; and such notice whether by service or publication shall be completed at least three days before said improvement is begun or the assessment levied. By Sec. 72 it is provided that: “No person shall bring any action whatever in any court in this State for damages arising out of improvements or change of grade unless he shall have filed with the council at some time after the publication of the notice provided for in Sec. 64 and before the time of the introduction of the ordinance providing for said improvement a statement of the damage which, in his opinion, he will sustain by reason of said improvement or the change of grade therefor, which statement shall be duly sworn to and be spread upon the minutes of said council.” Plaintiff asserts that Sec. 72 is unconstitutional in that it violates See. 9, Art. 3, Constitution, and allows the city to damage private property for public use without just compensation; and violates Sec. 10, Art. 3, Constitution, in that it allows deprivation of property without due process of law. Plaintiff’s counsel miakes no criticism of the form or substance of the plea. The plea does not give the date of the resolution by which the council determined the expediency of the improvement, nor when the notice required in Sec. 64 was published, nor when the notice was served on plaintiff, nor the date fixed by the council on which to hear her and other property owners in relation thereto; nor when the ordinance was introduced and passed by which the council determined to make the improvement as required by Sec. 67, nor when the work was let or begun. It simply says that prior to the injuries and wrongs complained of in the declaration the council had determined the necessity of making the improvement and established grades; that the resolution was duly published, as required by law, and due notice of the passage and contents of the ordinance ivas served on plaintiff and the date set for hearing of property owners in reference thereto, and there *147 after the ordinance was passed, and a contract was subsequently given for the work; and that plaintiff neither before the introduction or passage of the ordinance, nor prior to paving and improvement, had filed with the council her statement of damage which, in her opinion, she would sustain.

Is the statute in contravention of Sec. 9, Art. 3 of the Constitution? Does it deprive her from receiving or asserting damages for injuries done to her property by the city in improving the street for public use? The statutory proceedings for condemnation of private property for public use and the ascertainment of just compensation do not apply where .a city changes the grade of its streets. There is nothing to ■condemn. There is no statutory method of ascertaining such resultant damages by condemnation procedure. Without •organic or statutory law no such resultant damages were recoverable. It was damnum absque injuria, an injury without a wrong. But the Constitution has cured that, and now provides that private property shall not be injured by public use without compensation. It is no longer an injury without a wrong, and although no method is prescribed for obtaining redress, or for ascertaining the damages prior to the injury by general law, a suit in case is maintainable. Johnson v. City of Parkersburg, 16 W. Va. 402. The right to redress is not taken away by the statute; the remedy for the wrong remains. Before that remedy is invoked the Legislature has said that after notice has been served on the abutting owner to the effect that the city has decided in the affirmative the necessity and expediency of grading the street ■and proposes to do the grading and paving, it is necessary for him in order to preserve intact his remedy, to file with the •council an estimate of the damages he will claim, and which in his opinion he will sustain. The statute affects the remedy and provides a condition under which suit may be maintained. Had the statute made no provision for giving the ■abutting owner notice in order that he mfight protect his right and preserve in full his remedy, the due process clause of the Constitution would have been violated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 S.E. 705, 98 W. Va. 143, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-city-of-charleston-wva-1925.