Ferguson v. Board of Sup'rs of Wilkinson County

Decision Date05 March 1928
Docket Number26983
Citation115 So. 779,149 Miss. 623
PartiesFERGUSON v. BOARD OF SUP'RS OF WILKINSON COUNTY. [*]
CourtMississippi Supreme Court

Division B

1. EMINENT DOMAIN. Board of supervisors in proceedings condemning right of way for public highway exercises limited statutory authority (Hemingway's Code 1927, section 8340).

Board of supervisors in proceedings to condemn right of way for public highway under Code 1906, section 4400 (Hemingway's Code 1927, section 8340), exercises limited, special statutory authority, and is governed by rules of law applicable to exercise of such limited authority.

2. EMINENT DOMAIN. Power of eminent domain being in derogation of common right, statute conferring power to condemn land for public highway must be strictly construed (Hemingway's Code 1927, section 8340).

Power of eminent domain being in derogation of common right, Code 1906, section 4400 (Hemingway's Code 1927, section 8340) relating to condemning land for public highway, must be strictly construed and cannot be extended beyond its plain provisions.

3. EMINENT DOMAIN. Landowner is entitled to benefit of doubt of right to exercise power of eminent domain.

Right to exercise power of eminent domain is strictly limited to purposes expressed in statute conferring power, and where there is any doubt of right to exercise such power, landowner is entitled to benefit of such doubt.

4. EMINENT DOMAIN. Lands may be condemned for public roads only when it is shown to board of supervisors that public interest or convenience requires them (Hemingway's Code 1927 section 8340).

Under Code 1906, section 4400 (Hemingway's Code 1927, section 8340), public roads may be laid out and lands condemned there-for only when it is shown to board of supervisors that public interest or convenience requires them.

5. EMINENT DOMAIN. Where board of supervisors did not adjudicate on minutes that public interest or convenience required establishment of public road, order condemning right of way was void (Hemingway's Code 1927, section 8340).

Where board of supervisors did not adjudicate on its minutes that laying out and establishment of public road was required by public interest or convenience, as required by Code 1906, section 4400 (Hemingway's Code 1927, section 8340, order condemning right of way for public highway was void since matter was jurisdictional.

HON. R. L. CORBAN, Judge.

APPEAL from circuit court of Wilkinson county. HON. R. L. CORBAN, Judge.

A petition for the establishment of a public road was filed with the board of supervisors of Wilkinson county, and the board made an order condemning a right of way through lands of J. B. Ferguson. A trial in the circuit court resulted in a judgment affirming the board's action and Ferguson appeals. Reversed and remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

A. H. Jones and George Butler, for appellant.

The action of the board, and the order and judgment of the circuit court, are illegal, void and reversible because: first, this being a state highway, no legal application was made to the board of supervisors by the state highway department to condemn this right of way, and second, that the order of the board of supervisors is wholly void because it does not follow, nor comply with the law, and does not find and adjudicate that the public interest or convenience requires the road to be laid out and opened, altered or changed.

Nothing can be inferred, implied or presumed to supply a fact necessary to show jurisdiction; the order, the judgment itself must set out and show the essential fact. The state highway department in making an application for the condemnation of rights of way exercise only a special and limited jurisdiction, granted by statute, and in the exercise of this special and limited authority, it is necessary that all jurisdictional facts appear of record. Craft v. De Soto County, 79 Miss. 618, 31 So. 204; Hinton v. Perry County, 84 Miss. 546, 36 So. 567; Aden v. Board of Supervisors, 142 Miss. 696, 107 So. 753; Ferguson v. Seward, 146 Miss. 613, 111 So. 596; Board of Supervisors v. Ottley, 146 Miss. 118, 112 So. 466.

Section 17 of the Constitution of the state of Mississippi prohibits the taking of private property for public use except on due compensation in the manner to be prescribed by law, and provides that whether the contemplated use be public is a judicial question. The courts of this state have jealously guarded the rights of the citizens and taxpayers under this section of the Constitution. Polk v. City of Hattiesburg, 109 Miss. 876.

This court, in Levee Commissioners v. Allen, 60 Miss. 93, held that the statutes for condemning lands must be strictly construed and that it was essential that the jurisdictional facts appear in the order, and it was necessary to show that those condemning the lands were "freeholders or householders." This case is cited with approval in Cage v. Trager, 60 Miss. 570; White v. Railroad, 64 Miss. 571; Madden v. Ry. Co., 66 Miss. 270; Craft v. De Soto County, 70 Miss. 622, which were in turn approved by this court in Aden v. Board of Supervisors, 142 Miss. , which was approved by this court in Ferguson v. Seward, 146 Miss. 613 and Board of Supervisors v. Ottley, 146 Miss. 118, 112 So. 466. Section 4400, Code 1906, required the petition to be signed by ten or more freeholders or householders setting forth the commencement and termination and general course of the road "and that the public interest or convenience requires the road to be laid out and opened or altered or changed as shown in the petition." The order is silent as to the public interest or convenience. Wise v. Yazoo City, 96 Miss. 519, holds that where there is any doubt in regard to the extent of the power, the landowner must have the benefit of that doubt; that the power should never be exercised except with great caution and in cases most obviously for the public good, and further announced the doctrine that such legislative enactments should always be strictly construed. Polk v. City of Hattiesburg, supra, holds that the tribunal charged with the power must judicially and affirmatively determine that the use is public. See Craft v. De Soto County, 79 Miss. 618, 20 C. J. 949, p. 981; 15 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 534.

In construing section 15 (3) of the Interstate Commerce Act, which gives the Interstate Commerce Commission power in cases deemed by it to be necessary or desirable in the public interest, to establish through rates, routes, and classifications, etc., the Supreme Court of the United States in Virginia R. R. Co. v. U.S. 71 L.Ed. 257, said: "The Virginian contends that the order is void, because the commission directed the establishment of through routes and joint rates without finding that they are necessary in the public interest. Such a finding is essential to the validity of and order under section 15 (3)."

D. C. Bramlette, for appellee.

Counsel contend that the order granting the petition for the road was legally insufficient and did not determine or adjudicate that the petition should have been granted. The board of supervisors in this order did adjudicate and determine "that the prayer of the petitioners ought to be granted" and that "this board has full and complete jurisdiction in the premises" which was an adjudication and determination of the allegation of the petition that the public interest or convenience required the laying out and opening up of this highway. 20 C. J. 981, 982, lays down the proposition that: "If the pleadings show upon their face that the use is a public one, a finding of such fact is not necessary." To quote from note 31 to opposing counsel's citation 20 C. J. 981 is the following: "It is not necessary, where only a strip of land one hundred feet wide is taken, that the report should show expressly that the commissioners deemed such strip necessary. Hunt v. Smith, 9 Kan. 137."

A. H. Jones and George Butler, in reply for appellant.

The only point which we care to discuss in this reply brief is: Was it necessary for the order to adjudicate "that the public interest or convenience required the road to be laid out or altered or changed," as set out in the petition? See Abney v. Barnett, 1 Bibb. (Ky.) 557; Fletcher v. Fugate, 3 J. J. Marsh (Ky.) 631; Mansfield, etc., R. R. Co. v. Clarke, 23 Mich. 519.

A petition which did not conform to the requirements of the statute would be wholly insufficient to vest the board with jurisdiction to pass an order in the premises, and this court is thoroughly committed to the proposition that not only must the petition contain the necessary jurisdictional averments, but the order entered upon it must likewise affirmatively find and adjudicate the jurisdictional facts and the jurisdictional facts must be therein found and recited to exist. Counsel quote from 20 C. J. 559, 624, to the effect that the necessity and expediency of taking the land is a legislative and not a judicial question and also refers to the case of Hunt v. Smith, 9 Kan. 137. These authorities have no application in this state. In Kansas it is not required that there be a judicial determination that the use is a public use. Here the statute expressly required an adjudication that the taking is required by "the public interest or convenience."

Argued orally by A. H. Jones and George Butler, for appellant, and D. C. Bramlette, for appellee.

OPINION

ANDERSON, J.

Appellant appealed to the circuit court of Wilkinson county from an order of the board of supervisors of that county condemning a...

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