Parrish v. Town of Yorkville

Decision Date09 October 1913
Citation79 S.E. 635,96 S.C. 24
PartiesPARRISH v. TOWN OF YORKVILLE.
CourtSouth Carolina Supreme Court

Appeal from Common Pleas Circuit Court of York County; Thos. S Sease, Judge.

"To be officially reported."

Action by Laura E. Parrish against the Town of Yorkville. From a judgment sustaining a demurrer to the complaint, plaintiff appeals. Reversed.

Marion & Marion, of Chester, and Thos. F. McDow, of Yorkville, for appellant. W. W. Lewis, of Yorkville, for respondent.

HYDRICK J.

Plaintiff attempted to set up two causes of action in her complaint. Divested of unnecessary verbiage, the material allegations of the first cause of action are: That since the year 1908 the defendant has emptied the sewerage of the town of Yorkville into a stream which flows through plaintiff's land thereby polluting the waters thereof to her injury and damage; that said use of her property was begun without notice to her, and without her consent, and without acquiring the right thereto, or making compensation therefor in the manner prescribed by law, and that it has been continued against her protest; that defendant has refused her demand for compensation, and denies her right thereto; that such use of her property is a taking thereof for a public purpose, without compensation, and without due process of law, and she is thereby denied the equal protection of the law, contrary to the guaranties of both the state and federal Constitutions. The allegations of the second cause of action are such as are usual and appropriate to an action against a municipal corporation for damages for tort under the statute. Civil Code 1912,§ 3053.

The grounds of demurrer to the first cause of action are: (1) That an action for damages for tort cannot be maintained against a municipal corporation, in the absence of legislative authority, and there is no such authority to bring this action; (2) that plaintiff has a remedy by condemnation, which is exclusive. The first ground was also interposed to the second cause of action. The court sustained the demurrer to both causes of action and dismissed the complaint.

It has been settled by a long line of decisions in this court that an action for damages for tort will not lie against a municipal corporation, unless the corporation is made liable by statute, because such corporation is merely an agent of the state for governmental purposes. Young v. Commissioners, 2 Nott & McC. 537; White v. Charleston, 2 Hill, 575; Coleman v. Chester, 14 S.C. 291; Black v. Columbia, 19 S.C. 412, 45 Am. Rep. 785; Young v. Charleston, 20 S.C. 118, 47 Am. Rep. 827; Acker v. Anderson County, 20 S.C. 498; Chick v. Newberry, 27 S.C. 419, 3 S.E. 787; Hill v. Laurens County, 34 S.C. 145, 13 S.E. 318; Dunn v. Barnwell, 43 S.C. 401, 21 S.E. 315, 49 Am. St. Rep. 843; Parks v. Greenville, 44 S.C. 170, 21 S.E. 540; Matheny v. Aiken, 68 S.C. 163, 47 S.E. 56; Bramlett v. Laurens, 58 S.C. 60, 36 S.E. 444; Bryant v. City Council, 70 S.C. 140, 49 S.E. 229; Irvine v. Greenwood, 89 S.C. 515, 72 S.E. 228, 36 L. R. A. (N. S.) 363.

It is not, and cannot be, disputed that plaintiff has been deprived of her property; that it has been taken by defendant for a public purpose within the meaning of the constitutional guaranty that private property shall not be taken for a public purpose without just compensation. Matheny v. Aiken, 68 S.C. 179, 47 S.E. 56, and cases cited. The question of vital interest to the plaintiff, then, is, Has she any remedy for the injury which she has admittedly sustained? We think she has. As the Constitution forbids the taking of private property for a public use without just compensation, the grant by the Legislature of the right to condemn private property for such purposes imposes upon the condemning corporation the correlative duty to make just compensation for property so taken. Bramlett v. Laurens, 58 S.C. 60, 36 S.E. 444.

As condemnation of lands for such purposes is statutory in its origin, and was unknown to the common law, there is no common-law action appropriate to the assessment of compensation in such cases. Hence the statutes which confer the right to condemn usually provide a method of ascertaining the compensation, and this court has uniformly held that, when the statute provides a method, it is exclusive; the intention being that the remedy shall be simple, inexpensive, and expeditious. See cases cited below.

Turning to the statutes (Acts of 1902, 23 Stat. 1040; Civil Code 1912, § 3023), we find that the act which conferred upon municipal corporations the power to condemn lands and streams for the purpose of discharging sewerage provides that the compensation therefor shall be ascertained as follows: The corporation shall appoint one arbitrator, the landowner one, and these two a third, and the three shall constitute a board which shall ascertain the compensation and render its decision in writing, which shall be filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court. From the award either party may appeal to the circuit court, where the question of compensation shall be submitted to a jury in open court.

Appellant contends, however, that the statute authorizes the corporation only to institute condemnation proceedings. We do not concede the correctness of that proposition. The rights and duties of the municipality and of the landowner are reciprocal and correlative under the statute. It was intended for the benefit of both. We see no reason why either may not invoke the rights and remedies provided by it. There is no material difference between this statute and section 30 of the charter of the city of Greenville (which is quoted in full in Water Co. v. Greenville, 53 S.C. 86, 30 S.E. 699), under which it was held that the landowner sustaining damages could, by mandamus, compel the appointment of an arbitrator, who should be one of a board of three to assess...

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