City of Nashville v. Dad's Auto Accessories
| Decision Date | 19 June 1926 |
| Citation | City of Nashville v. Dad's Auto Accessories, 285 S.W. 52, 154 Tenn. 194 (Tenn. 1926) |
| Parties | CITY OF NASHVILLE v. DAD'S AUTO ACCESSORIES, INC., ET AL. |
| Court | Tennessee Supreme Court |
Certiorari to Court of Appeals.
Condemnation proceedings were instituted by City of Nashville; after notice to vacate was given, Dad's Auto Accessories, Inc. and another, filed petition for certiorari and supersedeas in the circuit court to review the proceedings, and the circuit court issued writ of certiorari and also writ of supersedeas to restrain the City from taking possession. Motion of the City to discharge supersedeas was overruled, and the City petitions for writs of certiorari and supersedeas to supersede that issued by the circuit judge. Writs issued, and cause remanded.
J Carlton Loser, J. Washington Moore, Norman Minick, Chas Gilbert, and A. G. Ewing, Jr., all of Nashville, for plaintiff.
Norman Farrell and Baxter Cato, both of Nashville, for defendants.
A petition is presented by the city for writs of certiorari and supersedeas to the circuit court of Davidson county. Condemnation proceedings were instituted by the city under its charter powers for the widening of a street, Eighth avenue, involving the taking of a 15-foot strip on which a building occupied by defendant under a lease was partly located. After appointment and report of the jury of view, and notice to defendant to vacate by a given date, defendant filed a petition for certiorari and supersedeas in the circuit court, seeking a review of the condemnation proceedings, attacking the constitutionality of the laws under which the city was acting, denying the legality of the steps taken, and setting up the failure of the city to conform to certain requirements of the law proceeded under, alleged to be essential, and challenging also the award of compensation reported by the jury.
The circuit judge issued the writ of certiorari to bring to that court the record, and, also, upon the giving of bond, a writ of supersedeas restraining the city from entering upon and taking possession of the lands occupied by the defendant pending the hearing. A motion of the city to discharge the supersedeas was overruled by the circuit judge, and by this petition the city now seeks to have this court remove the case here at the present stage by certiorari, and, also, supersede the supersedeas issued by the circuit judge, on the theory that the right of the city to enter upon the land condemned pending any litigation over the amount of damages, or other incidental issues, is absolute, under both the general rule applicable in condemnation proceedings and the special charter provisions of the city of Nashville.
A motion to dismiss the petition here is made on the theory that the jurisdiction is not in the Supreme Court, but in the Court of Appeals, under the act of 1925 (Pub. Acts 1925, c. 100), defining the jurisdiction of these courts. Conceding that cases involving constitutional questions come to this court, it is said that it appears that this case is one that presents also nonconstitutional questions which might be determinative, and that such a case goes to the Court of Appeals. The act of 1925 cannot be so construed. Whenever good-faith constitutional questions are involved, of a character which may be determinative, the jurisdiction is exclusively here.
It is insisted for the defendant that this court may not supersede an interlocutory stay order issued by the circuit court which is negative or restraining only in its effect, this being such a case. While this is substantially the holding in Howell v. Thompson, 130 Tenn. 311, 170 S.W. 253, wherein Mr. Justice Green fully reviewed the statute and authorities, that holding dealt with the office of the writ of supersedeas as an original primary process, and not with the writ of certiorari and an incidental supersedeas. The powers of this court with respect to the issuance of writs of certiorari to inferior courts, by statute and under our decisions, are broad and comprehensive, whenever an inferior tribunal exercising judicial functions has exceeded the jurisdiction conferred or is acting illegally. Shannon's Code, § 4853; State ex rel. v. Hebert, 127 Tenn. 220, 154 S.W. 957 (); Railroad v. Campbell, 109 Tenn. 645, 75 S.W. 1012; Clements v. Roberts, 144 Tenn. 129, 230 S.W. 30; State v. Alexander, 132 Tenn. 439, 178 S.W. 1107; Gilbreath v. Willett, 148 Tenn. 92, 251 S.W. 910, 28 A. L. R. 1147.
What was said in Howell v. Thompson, supra, and elsewhere with respect to the nonapplicability of the writs to interlocutory orders merely negative or prohibitory in character was said with reference to the writ of supersedeas as an independent original process. This has no application in the instant case, first, because the original primary process is the writ of certiorari, which is not so limited. As said by Mr. Justice Neil in State v. Hebert, supra (at page 242 ):
"The court will not usually by certiorari interfere with a lower court's dealing with a case, until final judgment, but it has the power in a proper case, and where necessary to effect the ends of justice will use that power."
In the second place, this is a condemnation proceeding, and it is well recognized that such an action is dual in nature, so that the recovery of the land, or right to its appropriation, may be had separately and in advance of the recovery of the damages, and that the one judgment may be had in advance of the other. "There may be two final judgments in this action, which can be reviewed by separate proceedings in error prosecuted at different times." Cunningham v. Terminal Co., 126 Tenn. 352, 149 S.W. 105 (Ann. Cas. 1913E, 1058).
When, as in this case, the right of appropriation of the land is denied by the circuit court the case has progressed to that point where review in this court of that branch of the proceeding may properly be sought. Tenn. Cent. R. Co. v. Campbell, 109 Tenn. 640, 75 S.W. 1012. It being therefore clear that this court has jurisdiction and lawful power to grant the writs--and certiorari is a peculiarly appropriate method of review in condemnation cases--it remains to be determined only whether or not the stay order restraining the city from entering upon the land has been lawfully and rightfully issued.
We think it may fairly be inferred that the learned circuit judge has been led to issue this restraining order by language to be found incorporated in section 1390, Code of 1858 (Shan. Code, § 1983), chapter 31 of the Public Acts of 1925, for, aside therefrom, the provisions of the municipal condemnation laws (Shan. Code, §§ 1981 to 1984, inclusive), and of the general condemnation laws (Shan. Code, §§ 1845 to 1865, inclusive), plainly provide, not only for appeal as to the matter of damages but for immediate entry and possession by the condemnor upon paying or securing the payment of the damages. For the city it is insisted that by the charter of the city of Nashville enacted in 1923 power was conferred to condemn in accordance with Shan. Code, §§ 1981-1984, as they then stood, and that the amendments provided for by chapter 31 of the Acts of 1925 do not amend these charter powers. To this we cannot assent. We are of opinion that powers conferred by reference to this general law as it stood at the time of the enactment of the charter are automatically amended by all subsequent amendments to the general law. The particular section now under consideration (Shan. Code, § 1983), deals with and confers upon the municipality a remedy by fine against any person failing or refusing to open the condemned way after notice. The amendment fixes more definitely the time of the notice and increases the amount of the fine to be imposed, and includes a proviso to the effect that if the owner contests the condemnation the obligation to surrender possession to the city and the liability for fine for failing so to do shall not obtain until such question shall be finally determined. For the defendant here it is contended that this clause authorizes the stay granted by the circuit judge. Standing alone this contention would be plausible. However, by the following section, which grants to the owner the right of appeal, it is "provided that any such appeal shall not operate to prevent the municipality from taking possession of the land condemned, nor stay the opening or extension of any such street, alley or common."
This language concludes the pertinent statutory provisions, is the final and most emphatic word, and as unequivocally as may be expressed negatives the right or power to "stay the opening or extension" pending the disposition of the question of compensation to the owner, or of incidental issues. It must be recognized as controlling, in harmony as it is with the positive provisions of Shannon's Code, § 1982, before and after amendment, and with the general condemnation sections (sections 1863-1865), with which these municipal condemnation sections are properly to be construed in pari materia, and with the obvious and judicially...
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