Road Improvement District v. St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company/Opinion of the Court

The question in this case is whether a proceeding in a state county court to assess benefits and damages growing out of a road improvement was properly removed to the federal District Court.

The assessors appointed by the county court of Lafayette county, Ark., for road improvement district No. 2, imposed an assessment on lands within the district, belonging to the St. Louis Southwestern Railway, a corporation of Missouri, of $49,706, for benefits from the projected improvement. The book of assessments for the district was filed by the district commissioners in the office of the county clerk and the day for hearing objections by the landowners before the county court was duly advertised. On the day before the hearing, the railway company filed a petition for removal to the District Court for the Western District of Arkansas, with the necessary bond. That court denied a motion to remand, tried the controversy between the commissioners of the road district and the railway company, reduced the assessment to $10,485.48, entered judgment therefor and certified the same to the county court. On error, the Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment, and the case is here on certiorari.

Under section 28 of the Judicial Code (Comp. St. § 1010), a suit at common law or in equity between citizens of different states involving more than $3,000, may be removed by the nonresident party to the proper federal District Court. Under section 29 (Comp. St. § 1011) the petition for removal must be filed on or before the day when defendant is required to answer. The petition herein was filed the day before the hearing as advertised, upon which day the landowner is required by state law to file his written objections. Thus the requisites of the removal statute were fulfilled, if the proceeding was a suit at common law in a state court.

Road district improvements are provided for in chapter 81, title 7, Crawford & Moses' Statutes of Arkansas. A district is formed upon a petition of a majority of the landowners by the county court's approval of the district and the projected improvement. C. & M. Dig. § 5399. The district then becomes a corporation, with a seal and capable of contracting and suing and being sued. C. & M. Dig. §§ 5402, 5404. The court appoints three commissioners, who are the governing body of the corporation. C. & M. Dig. §§ 5405 and 5407. After appointment, they cannot be removed by the county court, but are independent. Taylor v. Wallace, 143 Ark. 67, 219 S. W. 314. They submit to the county court a plan for the improvement and estimate its cost. C. & M. Dig. §§ 5409-5419. The county court then appoints three assessors, whose duty it is to assess the enhanced value which the improvement will give to the various lots of real estate (C. & M. Dig. §§ 5419, 5421), as well as the damages, if any, 'by reason of right of way taken or other damage sustained' (C. & M. Dig. §§ 5419, 5421, 5422). The damages 'may be paid out of the funds of the district, or by a reduction in the assessment of benefits in proportion to the amount of damages sustained.' C. & M. Dig. § 5422. The assessments of benefits and damages are noted by the assessors in a permanent book. C. & M. Dig. § 5421. The subsequent proceedings as to hearing and judgment are set forth in C. & M. Dig. §§ 5423 and 5424, given below in the margin.

Appeals from the judgment of the county court as to assessments of benefits and damages may be taken to the circuit court, the court of general jurisdiction, either by the owner or the commissioners of the district 'by filing an affidavit for appeal and stating therein the special matter appealed from, but such appeal shall affect only the particular tract of land * *  * concerning which said appeal is taken.' C. & M. Dig. pars. 5425, 5427; Wapponocca Outing Club v. Road Imp. District, 135 Ark. 196, 204 S. W. 840. The circuit court tries all such appeals denovo as if originally brought in that court (C. & M. Dig. par. 2236), and the judgment is in the same form as in the inferior court (Wilson v. Hinton, 63 Ark. 145, 38 S. W. 338).

Just as soon as the assessment book is filed in the office of the county clerk who is ex officio clerk of the county court, and the commissioners submit the estimate of cost of the improvement, the county court, pending its hearing of objections to assessments, levies an assessment against all the real property in the district, adding 10 per cent. to the estimated cost for contingencies, to be collected against the properties in proportion to the benefits then to be adjudged. C. & M. Dig. § 5432. The assessments thus determined and confirmed become liens on the property affected, and, unless paid, are collected through equitable proceedings brought by the commissioners of the road district to sell in the chancery court. C. & M. Dig. par. 5437.

This review shows that the proceedings for the making of this road improvement are in the main legislative and administrative. There is, however, one step in them that fulfills the definition of a judicial inquiry, if made by a court. That is the determination of the issue between the road district on the one part and the landowners on the other, as to the respective benefits which the improvement confers on their lands, and the damages they each suffer from rights of way taken and other injury.

The distinction between a proceeding which is the exercise of legislative power and of administrative character and a judicial suit is not always clear. An administrative proceeding transferred to a court usually becomes judicial, although not necessarily so. In Prentis v. Atlantic Coast Line R. R., 211 U.S. 210, 225, 226, 29 Sup. Ct. 67, 69 (53 L. Ed. 150), this court said:

'We shall assume that when, as here, a state Constitution     sees fit to unite legislative and judicial powers in a single      hand, there is nothing to hinder so far as the Constitution      of the United States is concerned. * *  * A judicial inquiry      investigates, declares and enforces liabilities as they stand      on present or past facts and under laws supposed already to      exist. That is its purpose and end. Legislation on the other     hand looks to the future and changes existing conditions by      making a new rule to be applied thereafter.'

The inquiry before the county court is a proceeding to declare and enforce a liability of lands and their owners as it stands on present and past facts under a law and rules already made by the Legislature and the administrative officers.

The determination of benefits in such cases it quite like the valuation of property under condemnation proceedings.

'The true inquiry is: What will the effect of the proposed     improvement be upon the market value of the real property      including the building thereon? The board may consider what     the property is then fairly worth on the market and what will      be the value when the improvement is made.' Kirst v. Street      Imp. Dist., 86 Ark. 1, 109 S. W. 526; Rogers v. Imp. Dist.,     139 Ark. 322, 213 S. W. 749.

Assessments for benefits and damages are different in their essential characteristics from those for general taxation. Paving District v. Sisters of Mercy, 86 Ark. 109, 109 S. W. 1165, 15 Ann. Cas. 347. Though due process of law does not necessarily require judicial machinery to fix values in condemnation, still, because of the direct invasion of private right, courts will treat it as a common-law suit whenever it is brought before a court, and it becomes removable as such to the federal court. Boom Co. v. Patterson, 98 U.S. 403, 25 L. Ed. 206; Searl v. School District No. 2, 124 U.S. 197, 8 Sup. Ct. 460, 31 L. Ed. 415; Madisonville Traction Co. v. St. Bernard Mining Co., 196 U.S. 239, 25 Sup. Ct. 251, 49 L. Ed. 462. Speaking of the power of eminent domain, Mr. Justice Field, in Boom Co. v. Patterson, supra, said:

'But, notwithstanding the right is one that appertains to     sovereignty, when the sovereign power attaches conditions to      its exercise, the inquiry whether the conditions have been      observed is a proper matter for judicial cognizance. If that     inquiry takes the form of a proceeding before the courts      between parties, the owners of the land on the one side, and      the company seeking the appropriation on the other, there is      a controversy which is subject to the ordinary incidents of a      civil suit, and its determination derogates in no respect      from the sovereignty of the state.'

This principle has been extended by this court to benefits set off against damages in Pacific Removal Cases, 115 U.S. 1, 18, 5 Sup. St. 1113, 29 L. Ed. 319. In that case the proceeding was for widening a street running through the grounds of a railway company. Under the statute, the hearing was, first, before the mayor and a jury, who were to determine the actual damage done to each person in consequence of the taking of his property, without reference to the proposed improvement; and, second, to determine the actual benefits conferred upon the city and upon such private property. This court held that the proceeding before the mayor and common council was only a preliminary inquisition, but that the distinct and separable issues in the state circuit court between the city and the private owner as to the value of his property taken for the street, and the amount of benefit his remaining property received from the improvements, constituted 'a suit' which might be removed to the federal court, even though their determination might delay the state court proceedings. The case rules the one before us so far as the character of the controversy is concerned. We have the same issues here, and they are just as separable from benefits and damages of the other owners.

The county court, in hearing this controversy, was a judicial tribunal from the time the commissioners filed the book of assessments in its clerk's office and asked its confirmation. The Constitution of 1874 of Arkansas, now in force declares in section 1, article 7, entitled the 'Judicial Department,' that—

'The judicial power of the state shall be vested in one     Supreme Court, in circuit courts, in county and probate      courts and in justices of the peace.'

Section 28 of the same article provides that—

'The county courts shall have exclusive original jurisdiction     in all matters relating to county taxes, roads, bridges,      ferries, paupers, bastardy, vagrants, the apprenticeship of      minors, the disbursement of money for county purposes, and in      every other case that may be necessary to the internal      improvement and local concerns of the respective counties. The county court shall be held by one judge, except in cases     otherwise herein provided.'

The exclusive jurisdiction of the county court, conferred by section 28, concerns matters which are primarily of an administrative character, but which often involve judicial inquiry and action inter partes. The county court may act therein as an administrative body or as a court. The Supreme Court of Arkansas has held the county court to be a court, and capable of rendering judgment in a proceeding whose judicial character is much more questionable than here. In Nevada v. Hicks, 50 Ark. 416, 8 S. W. 180, it decided that every allowance of a claim by the county court against the county was a judicial order. See Chicot County v. Sherwood, 148 U.S. 529, 532, 13 Sup. Ct. 695, 37 L. Ed. 546; Delaware County v. Diebold Safe Co., 133 U.S. 473, 10 Sup. Ct. 399, 33 L. Ed. 674.

C. & M. Dig. § 5424, quoted above in the margin, directs that, after the hearing, the county court shall make its findings, either confirming the assessments of benefits and damages, increasing or diminishing them, and that the order made by the county court shall have 'all the force and effect of a judgment against all real property in said district and it shall be deemed final, conclusive, binding and incontestable except by direct attack on appeal.' The form of the order of the county court in this case, made after removal, was:

'It is further considered, ordered, and adjudged by the court     that the assessment of benefits made against the St. Louis      Southwestern Railway Company *  *  * by the assessors for said      district be approved and confirmed by the court.'

Of course, the statutory designation of the action of a body as a judgment, or the phrasing of its finding and conclusion in the usual formula of a judicial order, is not conclusive of the character in which it is acting. When we find, however, that the proceeding before it has all the elements of a judicial controversy (Gaines v. Fuentes, 92 U.S. 10, 20, 23 L. Ed. 524), to wit, adversary parties and an issue in which the claim of one of the parties against the other, capable of pecuniary estimation, is stated and answered in some form of pleading, and is to be determined, we must conclude that this constitutional court is functioning as such.

But it is said that the state Supreme Court has held otherwise and that such a decision is binding on us. The question of removal under the federal statute is one for the consideration of the federal court. It is not concluded by the view of a state court as to what is a suit within the statute. Upshur County v. Rich, 135 U.S. 467, 477, 10 Sup. Ct. 651, 34 L. Ed. 196; Mason City R. R. Co. v. Boynton, 204 U.S. 570, 27 Sup. Ct. 321, 51 L. Ed. 629; Madisonville Traction Co. v. Mining Co., 196 U.S. 239, 25 Sup. Ct. 251, 49 L. Ed. 462. While the decision of the state court as to the nature of a proceeding under state statutes sought to be removed is, of course, very persuasive, it is not controlling, because involved in the application of a federal statute and the exercise of a federal constitutional right. The issue as to removal is akin to the question, which sometimes arises in enforcing the inhibition against state laws impairing the obligation of a contract, whether there is a contract under state law. This court decides that for itself. University v. People, 99 U.S. 309, 25 L. Ed. 387; Jefferson Bank v. Skelly, 1 Black, 436, 17 L. Ed. 173; Bridge Proprietors v. Hoboken Co., 1 Wall. 116, 17 L. Ed. 571; Delmas v. Merchants' Ins. Co., 14 Wall. 661, 20 L. Ed. 757.

The decision of the Supreme Court of Arkansas, relied on, is Mo. Pacific R. R. Co. v. Izard Co. Imp. Dist. No. 1, 143 Ark. 261, 220 S. W. 452, in which it was held that a proceeding like the one before us in the county court could not be removed to the federal court, because 'the duties which this statute devolves upon the county court, as already stated, are administrative and not judicial, although the line of demarcation is very close.'

'It will be observed that the power conferred by our statute     upon the county court is not to determine whether there      should be any assessment, but to equalize and adjust the      assessment that has been made by the commissioners. There is     nothing in the nature of an adversary proceeding, inter      parties, in the assessment made by the commissioners and      equalized and adjusted by the county court under the      authority of the statute.'

Our examination of the question leads us to a different conclusion. The book of assessments made by the assessors, as already noted, is presented by the commissioners of the district as an independent body, representing a fully equipped municipal corporation, capable of contracting, and of suing and being sued, to the county court. They are plaintiffs and petitioners, asking the court to give them a judgment confirming the assessments. The court's record in this case shows them present in person and by counsel, praying confirmation.

The statute does not define how the hearing before the county court is to be conducted, except that the objections of the landowners are to be in writing, as the book of assessment is. These two documents make the pleadings. It is to be inferred, in the absence of any restriction, that oral evidence is to be heard on the issues raised by the objections, and that the commissioners in person or by attorney may take part in the hearing. Indeed, it was admitted by counsel at the hearing that this is the practice. The proceeding is said to be only equalization; but we have already seen that each lot is to be separately considered as to benefits and damages, on appeal. If so, why not on removal? We conclude that the proceeding is adversary and inter partes.

The state court really decides that the issue as to the correctness of assessments of benefits and damages is always legislative and administrative. It relies chiefly on two federal authorities, Upshur v. Rich, 135 U.S. 467, 10 Sup. Ct. 651, 34 L. Ed. 196, and In re City of Chicago (C. C.) 64 Fed. 897. In the former, the county assessors of a county in West Virginia had valued for general taxation a large tract of wild land at a figure its owners deemed excessive. They filed a petition in the county court asking a reduction, and immediately filed another petition for removal of the proceeding to the federal court on the ground of diverse citizenship. This court held, on appeal from the Circuit Court, which had denied a motion to remand, that the removal could not be sustained. It said that such assessment of a general tax was an administrative act, that the county court in considering the appeal from the assessors was not a court, and that the proceeding was not adversary or a suit, 'though approaching very near the line of demarcation.' 135 U.S. 472, 10 Sup. Ct. 653, 34 L. Ed. 196. The county court in West Virginia had no judicial jurisdiction under the Constitution of the state, except that of probate. It had had in the past other judicial jurisdiction, but an amendment of the Constitution had taken this away, and it was empowered only to exercise duties 'not of a judicial nature.'

Mr. Justice Bradley, who spoke for the court in the Pacific Removal Cases, supra, also delivered the opinion in the Upshur Case and summed up the conclusion as follows:

'The principle to be deduced from these cases is that a     proceeding, not in a court of justice, but carried on by      executive officers in the exercise of their proper functions,      as in the valuation of property for the just distribution of      taxes or assessments, is purely administrative in its      character, and can not, in any just sense, be called a suit;      and that an appeal in such a case, to a board of assessors or      commissioners having no judicial powers, and only authorized      to determine questions of quantity, proportion and value, is      not a suit; but that such an appeal may become a suit, if      made to a court or tribunal having power to determine      questions of law and fact, either with or without a jury, and      there are parties litigant to contest the case on the one      side and the other.'

The manifest distinctions between the Upshur Case and this are, first, that the question here is not one of general taxation, the difference between which and assessments for benefits and damages we have already pointed out; second, that the county court of Arkansas, differing from the West Virginia county court, is a court, and by the Constitution of the state may exercise judicial functions in such subjects-matter; and, third, that the proceeding is inter partes.

The other federal case upon which the state Supreme Court relies, In re Chicago, supra, was a decision of the Circuit Court in a sewer assessment case involving the fixing of benefits which were to be equalized over a district which the assessors found to be fair. The court held it could not be removed from the county court, first, because such an assessment was a mere administrative act, an exercise of the taxing power; and, second, because the benefits could only be fixed with reference to the benefits to all other lots, and the whole case must be removed, if removed at all. The court with difficulty distinguished the Pacific Removal Case on the ground that that was a separate investigation as to each lot and that it was mingled with the fixing of damages. These are features which distinguish this proceeding also. Moreover, the case has been criticized and its authority shaken. In re Stutsman (C. C.) 88 Fed. 337, 341; In re Jarnecke Ditch (C. C.) 69 Fed. 161; Drainage Dist. v. Chic., M. & St. Paul (D. C.) 198 Fed. 253, 260.

The next objection is that the road district commissioners could not file their assessment book in the federal court, assuming the necessary diverse citizenship against any lot or lot owner, and so that the inquiry cannot be removed, because, under section 28 of the Judicial Code, removal is limited to cases within the original jurisdiction of the District Court under section 24 (Comp. St. § 991). This limitation is not intended to exclude from the right of removal defendants in cases in the state court which, because of their peculiar form would be awkward as an original suit in a federal court, or would require therein a reframing of the complaint and different procedure. Sheffield Furnace Co. v. Witherow, 149 U.S. 574, 579, 13 Sup. Ct. 936, 37 L. Ed. 853; Fleitas v. Richardson, No. 1, 147 U.S. 538, 544, 13 Sup. Ct. 429, 37 L. Ed. 272. The limitation is that only those proceedings can be removed which have the same essentials as original suits permissible in District Courts; that is that they can be readily assimilated to suits at common law or equity, and that there must be diverse citizenship of the parties and the requisite pecuniary amount involved. In re Stutsman County (C. C.) 88 Fed. 337; Madison Traction Co. v. Mining Co., 196 U.S. 239, 246, 25 Sup. Ct. 251, 49 L. Ed. 462; Searl v. School District No. 2, 124 U.S. 197, 8 Sup. Ct. 460, 31 L. Ed. 415; Colorado Midland Ry. Co. v. Jones (C. C.) 29 Fed. 193.

It is finally contended that the judgment of the District Court should be reversed, because it withdrew the case from the jury and then proceeded to make findings. No objection was taken by either party to this course and no exception was taken. Section 649, R. S. (Comp. St. § 1587), provides that a civil case in the District Court may be tried without the intervention of a jury on a written stipulation of the parties or their attorneys filed with the clerk, in which case the finding of the court on the facts, either general or special, shall have the same effect as the verdict of a jury, and by section 700, R. S. (Comp. St. § 1668), bills of exceptions may bring such findings before the Circuit Court of Appeals for review on the evidence. But, if there be no written stipulation of waiver of a jury, then no questions can arise on writ of error, except those which arise on the process, pleadings or judgment. Bond v. Dustin, 112 U.S. 604, 5 Sup. Ct. 296, 28 L. Ed. 835; Ladd & Tilton Bk. v. Hicks Co., 218 Fed. 310, 134 C. C. A. 106; Ford v. United States, 260 Fed. 657, 171 C. C. A. 421. The Circuit Court of Appeals, therefore, rightly held that no error could be predicated on the action of the District Judge in withdrawing the case from the jury and making findings, without objection or exception by the parties.

The judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals is

Affirmed.

Mr. Justice PITNEY took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.