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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
U.S. v. JONES, 109 U.S. 513 (1883)
109 U.S. 513
UNITED STATES
v.
JONES, Adm'r, etc., and others.
December 10, 1883
Sol. Gen. Phillips, for plaintiff in error.
N. S. Gilson, Geo. E. Sutherland, B. J. Stevens, and E. Mariner,
for defendants in error.
FIELD, J.
By an act of congress, passed on the eighth of August, 1846,
certain lands were ceded to Wisconsin to aid in improving the
navigation of Fox and Wisconsin rivers, in that state, and in
constructing a canal to unite the rivers, and thus form a connection
between the waters of Green bay, in Lake Michigan, and the waters of
the Mississippi. St. 1846, c. 170.
The state accepted the cession of the lands, and in August, 1848,
created a board of public works, under whose superintendence it placed
the construction of the improvement contemplated. The work, however,
was not done under that board; the means furnished proved inadequate.
Various other attempts, therefore, were made by different companies
created by the state to carry out the improvement, and in furtherance
of it congress ceded additional lands; but none of these at-
[109 U.S. 513, 514]
tempts proved successful. The improvement was only partially
made.
In 1866, by various transfers, which it is unnecessary to detail,
the lands ceded by congress, and the works of improvement, including
the locks, dams, canals, and other structures connected with it,
became the property of a corporation known as the Green Bay &
Mississippi Canal Company.
In July, 1870, congress passed an act 'for the improvement of water
communication between the Mississippi river and Lake Michigan, by the
Wisconsin and Fox rivers;' by which, among other things, the secretary
of war was authorized to ascertain the sum which ought to be paid to
the Green Bay & Mississippi Canal Company for the transfer of its
property and rights of property in the line of water communication
between Wisconsin river and the mouth of Fox river, including its
locks, dams, canals, and franchises, or so much thereof as, in his
judgment, should be needed; and for that purpose to join with the
company in the appointment of a board of arbitrators.
In making their award, the arbitrators were required to take into
consideration the amount of money obtained from the sale of lands
ceded by congress to aid in the construction of the water
communication which was to be deducted from the valuation found by
them. 16 St. c. 210.
Under this act arbitrators were appointed, the value of the works
ascertained, and an award made, the amount of which having been paid,
the entire property was, in 1872, conveyed to the United States. Since
then the United States has been the owner and in possession of the
works, and congress has made various appropriations to carry on and
complete the improvement.
The arbitrators, in making their award, proceeded upon the
principle that the United States should pay for the works what their
construction had cost the state, and the companies succeeding to its
interests, after making a reasonable abatement for wear and decay, and
deductting the amount obtained from the sale of the ceded lands. Some
of the dams constructed had caused the lands of several parties to be
overflowed, and in the estimate of the amount to be paid by the United
States, no ac- [109 U.S.
513, 515] count was taken of the liability of the company
for such damages. The question, therefore, soon arose whether the
payment of these damages devolved upon the United States, and this
question was submitted by the committee on commerce of the house of
representatives to the secretary of war, and by him was referred to
the assistant judge advocate general. That officer held that liability
for the damages incurred from the flowage of water on the lands of
others, caused by the works constructed, followed the property
transferred, and devolved on the United States. Upon this opinion a
bill was prepared for the assumption by them of the company's
liability for such damages, which was passed by congress and approved
on the third of March, 1875. This act provided that whenever, in the
prosecution and maintenance of the improvement mentioned, it should
become necessary or proper, in the judgment of the secretary of war,
to take possession of any lands, or the right of way over any lands,
for canals of cut-offs, or to use any earth, quarries, or other
material adjacent to the line of improvement and needful for its
prosecution or maintenance, the officers in charge of the works might,
in the name of the United States, take possession of and use the same,
after having first paid, or secured to be paid, the value thereof,
'which may have been ascertained in the mode provided by the laws of
the state' wherein the property lay.
The act also provided that in case any lands or other property were
then or should be overflowed or injured by means of any part of the
works of the improvement theretofore or thereafter constructed for
which compensation was then or should become legally owing, and in the
opinion of the officers in charge it should not be prudent to lower
the dam or dams, the amount of such compensation might be 'ascertained
in like manner;' that the department of justice should represent the
interest of the United States in legal proceedings under the act and
for 'flowage damages' previously occasioned, and that a portion of the
appropriation made for the prosecution of the improvement, not
exeeding in amount twenty-five thousand dollars, might be applied in
payment for property and rights thus taken and used.
[109 U.S. 513, 516]
In the previous year, 1874, the legislature of Wisconsin had
passed a law providing for ascertaining the compensation to be made
for damages caused to lands by their being overflowed or otherwise
injured, or taken by the United States in the construction of any
public works. It declared, among other things, that in case the lands
of any person had been overflowed or injured or taken, or if it should
be found necessary or proper thereafter to overflow, injure, or take
the lands of any person for or by reason of the construction of any
dam, bridge, lock, or pier, or the repair or enlargement thereof, or
the construction, repair, or enlargement of any canal or other works
of the United States government in the improvement of any harbor,
river, or stream of water in the state, the compensation for damages
sustained by the owner or owners of the lands overflowed, injured, or
taken might be ascertained, determined, and paid in the manner
prescribed in chapter 119 of the Laws of 1872, entitled 'An act in
relation to railroads and the organization of railroad companies,' for
acquiring title to lands of railroad companies, and that all the
provisions of such act properly applicable thereto should apply in the
case of the overflow, injury, or taking of lands by the United States
government for the purposes mentioned. Chapter 119 of the Laws of
1872, referred to in this act of 1874, prescribes the mode in which
land may be condemned for railroad purposes. The company is to file a
petition for the appointment of commissioners of appraisal with the
clerk of the circuit court of the county in which the property is
situated, containing, among other things, a description of the land
desired and the names of parties interested in it. Notice is then to
be given, by publication for three successive weeks in a newspaper of
the county or adjoining county, of the filing of the petition, of the
time and place of its presentation, and of the application for the
appointment of commissioners. On the presentation of the petition, the
parties whose interest may be affected by the proceeding are at
liberty to show cause against its prayer. If no sufficient cause be
shown, the court or judge may grant the petition and appoint three
disinterested and competent freeholders, resident in the county or
adjoining [109 U.S. 513,
517] county, to ascertain and appraise the compensation
to be made to the owner or owners of the property. Either party to the
proceeding, if dissatisfied with the award rendered, may appeal from
it to the circuit court, where a trial is to be had by a jury and the
compensation fixed by them. The proceeding, so far as the
ascertainment of compensation is concerned, there takes the form of a
regular action at law, in which the petitioner becomes the plaintiff
and the contestants the defendants. The chapter also provides that the
party interested in the land may institute and conduct the proceedings
to a conclusion, if the company delay or omit to prosecute the same.
Under the legislation referred to, the present proceeding was
instituted by the defendants in error to recover the value of certain
lands which had been overflowed by a dam constructed by the canal
company in the prosecution of the improvement mentioned. In their
petition they ask for the appointment of commissioners for the
appraisal of certain lands, which are described, and of the damage
caused to them by a dam constructed by the canal company, but owned by
the United States, they having succeeded to the title and possession
of the company. The also set forth the ownership of the lands, the
injury to them from the dam causing the waters of Lake Winnebago to
set back and overflow them, and that the dam cannot be maintained
without a continuance of such injuries. All the allegations required
by the statute were set forth. Commissioners were accordingly
appointed, before whom the parties interested appeared, the United
States being represented by counsel retained by the department of
justice. The awarded the petitioners the sum of $8,000. From this
award both parties appealed to the circuit court, where the case was
tried before a jury. Previously, however, to its being empaneled, the
defendants objected to the action of the court on three grounds:
First, that it had no jurisdiction of them; second, that it had no
jurisdiction to try a cause in which the United States were a party;
and, third, that the act of congress of March 3, 1875, was
unconstitutional in that it assumed to confer upon the state court
authority to try a cause in which the United States were a party.
These objections were overruled, and the
[109 U.S. 513, 518]
trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiffs for $10,000.
The judgment entered thereon was affirmed by the supreme court of the
state, and from that court the case is brought here on writ of error.
Various exceptions were taken to the rulings of the court on the
trial, but as they do not involve any question of federal law they are
not open for consideration here. The only point presented upon which
we can pass relates to the jurisdiction of the court below; if that
can be sustained, its judgment must be affirmed.
The position of the counsel of the United States in the court
below, as we understand it, was substantially this: That the power
vested in the federal government to take private property for the
public uses of the United States is, in its nature, exclusive, and its
exercise by any state is therefore prohibited as completely as though
the prohibition were expressed in terms; that the power cannot,
therefore, be delegated to the state of Wisconsin; that the
ascertainment of the compensation is involved in the exercise of the
power as a necesary part of it, inasmuch as there can be no lawful
taking until compensation is made; and that the act of congress
transferring to the state board and state court the function of
ascertaining the value of the property taken and the amount of
compensation to be made, is therefore invalid. There is, in this
position, and assumption that the ascertainment of the amount of
compensation to be made is an essential element of the power of
appropriation; but such is not the case. The power to take private
property for public uses, generally termed the right of eminent
domain, belongs to every independent government. It is an incident of
sovereignty, and, as said in Boom Co. v. Patterso, requires no
constitutional recognition.
98 U.S. 406 . The provision found in the fifth amendment to the
federal constitution, and in the constitutions of the several states,
for just compensation for the property taken, is merely a limitation
upon the use of the power. It is no part of the power itself, but a
condition upon which the power may be exercised. It is undoubtedly
true that the power of appropriating private property to public uses
vested in the general govern-
[109 U.S. 513, 519] ment-its right of
eminent domain, which Vattel defines to be the right of disposing, in
case of necessity and for the public safety, of all the wealth of the
country-cannot be transferred to a state any more than its other
sovereign attributes; and that, when the use to which the property
taken is applied is public, the propriety or expediency of the
appropriation cannot be called in question by any other authority. But
there is no reason why the compensation to be made may not be
ascertained by any appropriate tribunal capable of estimating the
value of the property. There is nothing in the nature of the matter to
be determined which calls for the establishment of any special
tribunal by the appropriating power.
The proceeding for the ascertainment of the value of the property
and consequent compensation to be made, is merely an inquisition to
establish a particular fact as a preliminary to the actual taking; and
it may be prosecuted before commissioners or special boards or the
courts, with or without the intervention of a jury, as the legislative
power may designate. All that is required is that it shall be
conducted in some fair and just manner, with opportunity to the owners
of the property to present evidence as to its value, and to be heard
thereon. Whether the tribunal shall be created directly by an act of
congress, or one already established by the states shall be adopted
for the occasion, is a mere matter of legislative discretion.
Undoubtedly IT WAS THE PURPOSE OF THE CONSTITUTION To establish a
general goverment independent of, and in some respects superior to,
that of the state governments-one which could enforce its own laws
through its own officers and tribunals; and this purpose was
accomplished. That government can create all the officers and
tribunals required for the execution of its powers. Upon this point
there can be no question. Kohl v. U. S.
91 U.S. 367 . Yet from the time of its establishment that
government has been in the habit of using, with the consent of the
states, their officers, tribunals, and institutions as its agents.
Their use has not been deemed violative of any principle or as in any
manner derogating from the sovereign authority of the federal
government; [109 U.S.
513, 520] but as a matter of convenience and as tending
to a great saving of expense.
The use of the courts of the states in applying the rules of
naturalization prescribed by congress, the exercise at one time by
state justices of the peace of the power of committing magistrates for
violations of federal law, and the use of state penitentiaries for the
confinement of convicts under such laws, are instances of the
employment of state tribunals and state institutions in the execution
of powers of the general government. At different times various duties
have been imposed by acts of congress on state tribunals; they have
been invested with jurisdiction in civil suits, and over complaints
and prosecutions for fines, penalties, and forfeitures arising under
laws of the United States. 1 Kent, 400. And though the jurisdiction
thus conferred could not be enforced against the consent of the
states, yet, when its exercise was not incompatible with state duties,
and the states made no objection to it, the decisions rendered by the
state tribunals were upheld. Whatever question might arise as to such
delegation of authority, we can see none where the inquiry relates to
an incidental fact, not involving in its ascertainment the exercise of
any sovereign attribute. Almost, if not quite, from the first year of
its existence, it has been the practice of the general government,
when necessary, to taken private property for public uses, to resort
to state borads and tribunals to ascertain the value of the property,
and hence the compensation to be made. Burt v. Merchants' Ins. Co. 106
Mass. 362. In recent statutes such resort is expressly prescribed. For
example, on the third of March, 1879, an act was passed for improving
a part of Tennessee river, which provided that, whenever it became
necessary to take private property, 'the price to be paid shall be
determined, and the title and jurisdiction procured, in the manner
prescribed by the laws of the state of Alabama.' And, on the
fourteenth of June, 1880, an act was passed making an appropriation
for constructing reservoirs on the head-waters of the Mississippi,
with a provision that 'injuries occasioned to individuals by the
overflow of their lands shall be ascertained and determined by
agreement, or in accordance with the laws of
[109 U.S. 513, 521]
Minnestota.' These are but examples of many instances of
legislation where resort is had to local boards or tribunals to
ascertain particular facts by which the general government may be
guided in its action. Whatever assent may be necessary to the validity
of the proceedings against the United States, owing to their general
immunity from process, is given by such legislation.
The provisions of the act of 1875, with reference to the property
overflowed by dams constructed in the improvement of the navigation of
Fox and Wisconsin rivers, that the compensation to be made shall be
ascertained in the mode and manner prescribed by the laws of the
state, and that in any proceedings to ascertain such compensation the
interests of the United States shall be represented by the department
of justice, constitutes a sufficient waiver of the immunity. The
legislation amounts to a consent to such proceedings as the state laws
authorize for the condemnation of property in which the United States
are interested. In the present case the overflow of the property for
which compensation was asked was caused while the property was held by
the canal company, before its acquisition, in 1872, by the United
States; and the legislation is, in legal effect, little more than a
declaration that the United States will pay the compensation which may
be awarded by officers of the state in proceedings taken in accordance
with its laws. In any aspect in which the legislation can be viewed,
we see no objection to it arising out of the independent or sovereign
character of the government of the United States.
Judgment affirmed.
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