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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
KOHL v. U S, 91 U.S. 367 (1875)
91 U.S. 367
KOHL ET AL.
v.
UNITED STATES.
October Term, 1875
[ Kohl v. U S
91 U.S. 367 (1875)
ERROR to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern
District of Ohio.
This was a proceeding instituted by the United States to
appropriate a parcel of land in the city of Cincinnati as a site for a
post-office and other public uses.
The plaintiffs in error owned a perpetual leasehold estate in a
portion of the property sought to be appropriated. They moved to
dismiss the proceeding on the ground of want of jurisdiction; which
motion was overruled. They then demanded a separate trial of the value
of their estate in the property; which demand the court also
overruled. To these rulings of the court the plaintiffs in error here
excepted. Judgment was rendered in favor of the United States.
There are three acts of Congress which have reference to the
acquisition of a site for a post-office in Cincinnati. The first,
approved March 2, 1872, 17 Stat. 39, is as follows:--
'Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled, That the Secretary
of the Treasury be, and he is hereby, authorized and directed to
purchase a central and suitable site in the city of Cincinnati,
Ohio, for the erection of a building for the accommodation of the
United States courts, custom-house, United States depository,
post-office, internal-revenue and pension offices, at a cost not
exceeding three hundred thousand dollars; provided that no money
which may hereafter be appropriated for this purpose shall be used
or expended in the purchase of said site until a valid title thereto
shall be vested in the United States, and until the State of Ohio
shall cede its jurisdiction over the same, and shall duly release
and relinquish to the United States the right to tax or in any way
assess said site and the property of the United States that may be
thereon during the time that the United States shall be or remain
the owner thereof.'
In the Appropriation Act of June 10, 1872, 17 Stat. 352, a further
provision was made as follows:--
'To commence the erection of a building at Cincinnati, Ohio, for
the accommodation of the United States courts, custom-house, United
States depository, post-office, internal-revenue and pension
offices, and for the purchase, at private sale or by condemnation,
of ground for a site therefor,-the entire cost of completion of
which [91 U.S. 367,
369] building is hereby limited to two million two
hundred and fifty thousand dollars (inclusive of the cost of the
site of the same),-seven hundred thousand dollars; and the act of
March 12, 1872, authorizing the purchase of a site therefor, is
hereby so amended as to limit the cost of the site to a sum not
exceeding five hundred thousand dollars.'
And in the subsequent Appropriation Act of March 3, 1873, 17 Stat.
523, a further provision was inserted as follows:--
'For purchase of site for the building for custom-house and post-
office at Cincinnati, Ohio, seven hundred and fifty thousand
dollars.'
Mr. E. W. Kittredge for plaintiffs in error.
1. For upwards of eighty years, no act of Congress was
passed for the exercise of the right of eminent domain in the States,
or for acquiring property for Federal purposes otherwise than by
purchase, or by appropriation under the authority of State laws in
State tribunals. A change of policy by Congress in this regard should
not be supposed, unless the act is explicit. We do not raise the
question as to the existence of the right of eminent domain in the
national government; but Congress has never given to the Circuit Court
jurisdiction of proceedings for the condemnation of property brought
by the United States in the assertion or enforcement of that right.
In view of the uniform practice of the government, the provision in
the act of Congress 'for the purchase at private sale or by
condemnation' means that the land was to be obtained under the
authority of the State government in the exercise of its power of
eminent domain. This is apparent from the language of the same section
of the act of Congress of June 10, 1872, which appropriated a further
sum for the 'purchase' of a site in Cincinnati, and also appropriated
money 'to obtain by purchase, or to obtain by condemnation in the
courts of the State of Massachusetts,' a site for a post-office in
Boston.
In this case, the State delegates its sovereign power of eminent
domain. The United States, if it accepts this grant of power, accepts
it as other corporations do, as the agent of the State, and must
exercise it in the mode and by the tribunal which the State has
prescribed.
2. If the proceeding was properly brought in the Circuit
Court, [91 U.S. 367,
370] then the act of Congress of June 1, 1872, 17 Stat.
522, requires that it shall conform to the provisions of the law of
the State in a like proceeding in a State court. The eighth section of
the act of Ohio of April 23, 1872, 69 Ohio Laws, 88, secures to the
owner of 'each separate parcel' of property a separate trial, verdict,
and judgment. The court below erred in refusing this demand of the
plaintiff.
Mr. Assistant Attorney-General Edwin B. Smith, contra.
1. The right of eminent domain is an 'inseparable incident
of sovereignty.' Giesy v. C. W. & T. R.R. Co., 4 Ohio St. 323, 324;
West River Bridge v. Dix, 6 How. 507; 2 Kent, 339; Cooley, Const. Lim.
526.
Of course the right of the United States is superior to that of any
State. Dobbins v. Comms., 16 Pet. 447.
The authority to purchase includes the right of condemnation. 4
Kent's Com. 372; Burt v. Ins. Co., 106 Mass. 364; 7 Opinions of Att'y-Gen.
114.
Congress, by the use of the term 'condemnation,' indicated an
expectation that it might and would be resorted to.
The legislature of Ohio concurred in this view of the power and
necessity of such action, and passed an act of expropriation. 69 Ohio
Laws, 81. But the right of a State to act as an agent of the Federal
government, in actually making the seizure, has been denied. 23 Mich.
471.
The power to establish post-offices includes the right to acquire
sites therefor, and by appropriation if necessary. Dickey v. Turnpike
Co., 7 Dana, 113; 2 Story on Const., sect. 1146
Original cognizance 'of all suits of a civil nature at common law
or in equity,' where the United States are plaintiffs or petitioners,
is given to the Circuit Court of the United States.
'The term [suit] is understood to apply to any proceeding in a
court of justice by which an individual pursues that remedy which
the law affords.' 2 Pet. 464.
No provision of local law confining a remedy to a State court can
affect a suitor's right to resort to the Federal tribunals. Hyde v.
Stone, 20 How. 170; Payne v. Hook, 7 Wall. 425; Railway Co. v. Whitton,
13 id. 270.
Therefore the United States had the right to pursue in the
[91 U.S. 367, 371]
Circuit Court the remedy given by the legislature of Ohio, 70
Ohio Laws, 36.
2. The power to consolidate different suits by various
parties, so as to determine a general question by a single trial, is
expressly given by act of July 22, 1833. 3 Stat.; 21 R. S., ch. 18,
sect. 921, p. 175.
The statute of Ohio, 69 Ohio Laws, 88, requires that the trial be
had as to each parcel of land taken, not as to separate interest in
each parcel.
MR. JUSTICE STRONG delivered the opinion of the court.
It has not been seriously contended during the argument that the
United States government is without power to appropriate lands or
other property within the States for its own uses, and to enable it to
perform its proper functions. Such an authority is essential to its
independent existence and perpetuity. These cannot be preserved if the
obstinacy of a private person, or if any other authority, can prevent
the acquisition of the means or instruments by which alone
governmental functions can be performed. The powers vested by the
Constitution in the general government demand for their exercise the
acquisition of lands in all the States. These are needed for forts,
armories, and arsenals, for navy-yards and light-houses, for
custom-houses, post-offices, and court-houses, and for other public
uses. If the right to acquire property for such uses may be made a
barren right by the unwillingness of property-holders to sell, or by
the action of a State prohibiting a sale to the Federal government,
the constitutional grants of power may be rendered nugatory, and the
government is dependent for its practical existence upon the will of a
State, or even upon that of a private citizen. This cannot be. No one
doubts the existence in the State governments of the right of eminent
domain,-a right distinct from and paramount to the right of ultimate
ownership. It grows out of the necessities of their being, not out of
the tenure by which lands are held. It may be exercised, though the
lands are not held by grant from the government, either mediately or
immediately, and independent of the consideration whether they would
escheat to the government in case of a failure of heirs. The right is
the offspring of political necessity; and it is inseparable
[91 U.S. 367, 372]
from sovereignty, unless denied to it by its fundamental law.
Vattel, c. 20, 34; Bynk., lib. 2, c. 15; Kent's Com. 338-340; Cooley
on Const. Lim. 584 et seq. But it is no more necessary for the
exercise of the powers of a State government than it is for the
exercise of the conceded powers of the Federal government. That
government is as sovereign within its sphere as the States are within
theirs. True, its sphere is limited. Certain subjects only are
committed to it; but its power over those subjects is as full and
complete as is the power of the States over the subjects to which
their sovereignty extends. The power is not changed by its transfer to
another holder.
But, if the right of eminent domain exists in the Federal
government, it is a right which may be exercised within the States, so
far as is necessary to the enjoyment of the powers conferred upon it
by the Constitution. In Ableman v. Booth, 21 How. 523, Chief Justice
Taney described in plain language the complex nature of our
government, and the existence of two distinct and separate
sovereignties within the same territorial space, each of them
restricted in its powers, and each, within its sphere of action
prescribed by the Constitution of the United States, independent of
the other. Neither is under the necessity of applying to the other for
permission to exercise its lawful powers. Within its own sphere, it
may employ all the agencies for exerting them which are appropriate or
necessary, and which are not forbidden by the law of its being. When
the power to establish post-offices and to create courts within the
States was conferred upon the Federal government, included in it was
authority to obtain sites for such offices and for court-houses, and
to obtain them by such means as were known and appropriate. The right
of eminent domain was one of those means well known when the
Constitution was adopted, and employed to obtain lands for public
uses. Its existence, therefore, in the grantee of that power, ought
not to be questioned. The Constitution itself contains an implied
recognition of it beyond what may justly be implied from the express
grants. The fifth amendment contains a provision that private property
shall not be taken for public use without just compensation. What is
that but an implied assertion, that, on
[91 U.S. 367, 373]
making just compensation, it may be taken? In Cooley on
Constitutional Limitations, 526, it is said,--
'So far as the general government may deem it important to
appropriate lands or other property for its own purposes, and to
enable it to perform its functions,- as must sometimes be necessary
in the case of forts, light-houses, and military posts or roads, and
other conveniences and necessities of government,-the general
government may exercise the authority as well within the States as
within the territory under its exclusive jurisdiction: and its right
to do so may be supported by the same reasons which support the
right in any case; that is to say, the absolute necessity that the
means in the government for performing its functions and
perpetuating its existence should not be liable to be controlled or
defeated by the want of cousent of private parties or of any other
authority.'
We refer also to Trombley v. Humphrey, 23 Mich. 471; 10 Pet. 723;
Dickey v. Turnpike Co., 7 Dana, 113; McCullough v. Maryland, 4 Wheat.
429.
It is true, this power of the Federal government has not heretofore
been exercised adversely; but the non-user of a power does not
disprove its existence. In some instances, the States, by virtue of
their own right of eminent domain, have condemned lands for the use of
the general government, and such condemnations have been sustained by
their courts, without, however, denying the right of the United States
to act independently of the States. Such was the ruling in Gilmer v.
Lime Point, 18 Cal. 229, where lands were condemned by a proceeding in
a State court and under a State law for a United States fortification.
A similar decision was made in Burt v. The Merchants' Ins. Co., 106
Mass. 356, where land was taken under a State law as a site for a
post-office and subtreasury building. Neither of these cases denies
the right of the Federal government to have lands in the States
condemned for its uses under its own power and by its own action. The
question was, whether the State could take lands for any other public
use than that of the State. In Trombley v. Humphrey, 23 Mich. 471, a
different doctrine was asserted, founded, we think, upon better
reason. The proper view of the right of eminent domain seems to be,
that it is a right belonging to a
[91 U.S. 367, 374] sovereignty to take
private property for its own public uses, and not for those of
another. Beyond that, there exists no necessity; which alone is the
foundation of the right. If the United States have the power, it must
be complete in itself. It can neither be enlarged nor diminished by a
State. Nor can any State prescribe the manner in which it must be
exercised. The consent of a State can never be a condition precedent
to its enjoyment. Such consent is needed only, if at all, for the
transfer of jurisdiction and of the right of exclusive legislation
after the land shall have been acquired.
It may, therefore, fairly be concluded that the proceeding in the
case we have in hand was a proceeding by the United States government
in its own right, and by virtue of its own eminent domain. The act of
Congress of March 2, 1872, 17 Stat. 39, gave authority to the
Secretary of the Treasury to purchase a central and suitable site in
the city of Cincinnati, Ohio, for the erection of a building for the
accommodation of the United States courts, custom-house, United States
depository, postoffice, internal-revenue and pension offices, at a
cost not exceeding $ 300,000; and a proviso to the act declared that
no money should be expended in the purchase until the State of Ohio
should cede its jurisdiction over the site, and relinquish to the
United States the right to tax the property. The authority here given
was to purchase. If that were all, it might be doubted whether the
right of eminent domain was intended to be invoked. It is true, the
words 'to purchase' might be construed as including the power to
acquire by condemnation; for, technically, purchase includes all modes
of acquisition other than that of descent. But generally, in statutes
as in common use, the word is employed in a sense not technical, only
as meaning acquisition by contract between the parties, without
governmental interference. That Congress intended more than this is
evident, however, in view of the subsequent and amendatory act passed
June 10, 1872, which made an appropriation 'for the purchase at
private sale or by condemnation of the ground for a site' for the
building. These provisions, connected as they are, manifest a clear
intention to confer upon the Secretary of the Treasury power to
acquire the grounds needed by the exercise of the national right of
eminent domain, [91 U.S.
367, 375] or by private purchase, at his discretion. Why
speak of condemnation at all, if Congress had not in view an exercise
of the right of eminent domain, and did not intend to confer upon the
secretary the right to invoke it?
But it is contended on behalf of the plaintiffs in error that the
Circuit Court had no jurisdiction of the proceeding. There is nothing
in the acts of 1872, it is true, that directs the process by which the
contemplated condemnation should be effected, or which expressly
authorizes a proceeding in the Circuit Court to secure it. Doubtless
Congress might have provided a mode of taking the land, and
determining the compensation to be made, which would have been
exclusive of all other modes. They might have prescribed in what
tribunal or by what agents the taking and the ascertainment of the
just compensation should be accomplished. The mode might have been by
a commission, or it might have been referred expressly to the Circuit
Court; but this, we think, was not necessary. The investment of the
Secretary of the Treasury with power to obtain the land by
condemnation, without prescribing the mode of exercising the power,
gave him also the power to obtain it by any means that were competent
to adjudge a condemnation. The Judiciary Act of 1789 conferred upon
the circuit courts of the United States jurisdiction of all suits at
common law or in equity, when the United States, or any officer
thereof, suing under the authority of any act of Congress, are
plaintiffs. If, then, a proceeding to take land for public uses by
condemnation may be a suit at common law, jurisdiction of it is vested
in the Circuit Court. That it is a 'suit' admits of no question. In
Weston v. Charleston, 2 Pet. 464, Chief Justice Marshall, speaking for
this court, said, 'The term [ suit] is certainly a very comprehensive
one, and is understood to apply to any proceeding in a court of
justice by which an individual pursues that remedy which the law
affords. The modes of proceeding may be various; but, if a right is
litigated in a court of justice, the proceeding by which the decision
of the court is sought is a suit.' A writ of prohibition has,
therefore, been held to be a suit; so has a writ of right, of which
the Circuit Court has jurisdictio (Green v. Liter, 8 Cranch, 229); so
has habeas corpus. Holmes v. Jamison, 14 Pet. 564. When,
[91 U.S. 367, 376]
in the eleventh section of the Judiciary Act of 1789,
jurisdiction of suits of a civil nature at common law or in equity was
given to the circuit courts, it was intended to embrace not merely
suits which the common law recognized as among its old and settled
proceedings, but suits in which legal rights were to be ascertained
and determined as distinguished from rights in equity, as well as
suits in admiralty. The right of eminent domain always was a right at
common law. It was not a right in equity, nor was it even the creature
of a statute. The time of its exercise may have been prescribed by
statute; but the right itself was superior to any statute. That it was
not enforced through the agency of a jury is immaterial; for many
civil as well as criminal proceedings at common law were without a
jury. It is difficult, then, to see why a proceeding to take land in
virtue of the government's eminent domain, and determining the
compensation to be made for it, is not, within the meaning of the
statute, a suit at common law, when initiated in a court. It is an
attempt to enforce a legal right. It is quite immaterial that Congress
has not enacted that the compensation shall be ascertained in a
judicial proceeding. That ascertainment is in its nature at least
quasi judicial. Certainly no other mode than a judicial trial has been
provided.
It is argued that the assessment of property for the purpose of
taking it is in its nature like the assessment of its value for the
purpose of taxation. It is said they are both valuations of the
property to be made as the legislature may prescribe, to enable the
government, in the one case, to take the whole of it, and in the other
to take a part of it for public uses; and it is argued that no one but
Congress could prescribe in either case that the valuation should be
made in a judicial tribunal or in a judicial proceeding, although it
is admitted that the legislature might authorize the valuation to be
thus made in either case. If the supposed anslogy be admitted, it
proves nothing. Assessments for taxation are specially provided for,
and a mode is prescribed. No other is, therefore, admissible. But
there is no special provision for ascertaining the just compensation
to be made for land taken. That is left to the ordinary processes of
the law; and hence, as the government is a suitor for the property
under [91 U.S. 367, 377]
a claim of legal right to take it, there appears to be no
reason for holding that the proper Circuit Court has not jurisdiction
of the suit, under the general grant of jurisdiction made by the act
of 1789.
The second assignment of error is, that the Circuit Court refused
the demand of the defendants below, now plaintiffs in error, for a
separate trial of the value of their estate in the property. They were
lessees of one of the parcels sought to be taken, and they demanded a
separate trial of the value of their interest; but the court overruled
their demand, and required that the jury should appraise the value of
the lot or parcel, and that the lessees should in the same trial try
the value of their leasehold estate therein. In directing the course
of the trial, the court required the lessor and the lessees each
separately to state the nature of their estates to the jury, the
lessor to offer his testimony separately, and the lessees theirs, and
then the government to answer the testimony of the lessor and the
lessees; and the court instructed the jury to find and return
separately the value of the estates of the lessor and the lessees. It
is of this that the lessees complain. They contend, that whether the
proceeding is to be treated as founded on the national right of
eminent domain, or on that of the State, its consent having been given
by the enactment of the State legislature of Feb. 15, 1873 (70 Ohio
Laws, 36, sect. 1), it was required to conform to the practice and
proceedings in the courts of the State in like cases. This
requirement, it is said, was made by the act of Congress of June 1,
1872. 17 Stat. 522. But, admitting that the court was bound to conform
to the practice and proceedings in the State courts in like cases, we
do not perceive that any error was committed. Under the laws of Ohio,
it was regular to institute joint proceeding against all the owners of
lots proposed to be taken (Giesy v. C. W. & T. R.R. Co., 4 Ohio St.
308); but the eighth section of the State statute gave to 'the owner
or owners of each separate parcel' the right to a separate trial. In
such a case, therfore, a separate trial is the mode of proceeding in
the State courts. The statute treats all the owners of a parcel as one
party, and gives to them collectively a trial separate from the trial
of the issues between the government and the owners of other parcels.
It [91 U.S. 367, 378]
hath this extent; no more. The court is not required to
allow a separate trial to each owner of an estate or interest in each
parcel, and no consideration of justice to those owners would be
subserved by it. The Circuit Court, therefore, gave to the plaintiffs
in error all, if not more than all, they had a right to ask.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE FLELD dissenting.
Assuming that the majority are correct in the doctrine announced in
the opinion of the court,-that the right of eminent domain within the
States, using those terms not as synonymous with the ultimate dominion
or title to property, but as indicating merely the right to take
private property for public uses, belongs to the Federal government,
to enable it to execute the powers conferred by the Constitution,-and
that any other doctrine would subordinate, in important particulars,
the national authority to the caprice of individuals or the will of
State legislatures, it appears to me that provision for the exercise
of the right must first be made by legislation. The Federal courts
have no inherent jurisdiction of a proceeding instituted for the
condemnation of property; and I do not find any statute of Congress
conferring upon them such authority. The Judiciary Act of 1789 only
invests the circuit courts of the United States with jurisdiction,
concurrent with that of the State courts, of suits of a civil nature
at common law or in equity; and these terms have reference to those
classes of cases which are conducted by regular pleadings between
parties, according to the established doctrines prevailing at the time
in the jurisprudence of England. The proceeding to ascertain the value
of property which the government may deem necessary to the execution
of its powers, and thus the compensation to be made for its
appropriation, is not a suit at common law or in equity, but an
inquisition for the ascertainment of a particular fact as preliminary
to the taking; and all that is required is that the proceeding shall
be conducted in some fair and just mode, to be provided by law, either
with or without the intervention of a jury, opportunity being afforded
to parties interested to present evidence as to the value of the
property, and to be heard thereon. The proceeding by the States, in
the [91 U.S. 367, 379]
exercise of their right of eminent domain, is often had
before commissioners of assessment or special boards appointed for
that purpose. It can hardly be doubted that Congress might provide for
inquisition as to the value of property to be taken by similar
instrumentalities; and yet, if the proceeding be a suit at common law,
the intervention of a jury would be required by the seventh amendment
to the Constitution.
I think that the decision of the majority of the court in including
the proceeding in this case under the general designation of a suit at
common law, with which the circuit courts of the United States are
invested by the eleventh section of the Judiciary Act, goes beyond
previous adjudications, and is in conflict with them.
Nor am I able to agree with the majority in their opinion, or at
least intimation, that the authority to purchase carries with it
authority to acquire by condemnation. The one supposes an agreement
upon valuation, and a voluntary conveyance of the property: the other
implies a compulsory taking, and a contestation as to the value.
Beekman v. The Saratoga & Schenectady Railroad Co., 3 Paige, 75;
Railroad Company v. Davis, 2 Dev. & Batt. 465; Willyard v. Hamilton, 7
Ham. (Ohio), 453; Livingston v. The Mayor of New York, 7 Wend. 85;
Koppikus v. State Capitol Commissioners, 16 Cal. 249.
For these reasons, I am compelled to dissent from the opinion of
the court.
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