Jasper Land & Improvement Co. v. Kansas City

This is a suit to recover the remainder of an amount awarded plaintiff in a condemnation proceeding as compensation for real estate taken for street purposes. Defendant demurred to the petition. The demurrer being overruled, it declined to plead further, and judgment was rendered against it for the *Page 677 amount claimed with interest. From that judgment it appeals.

The facts disclosed by the petition are briefly these: On May 9, 1917, an ordinance of Kansas City was duly enacted which provided for the opening, widening and extending of certain streets and avenues as enlarged approaches to the Union Station, and condemning the necessary lands for such purposes, including certain lands belonging to plaintiff. On June 2nd following, a certified copy of the ordinance, together with a plat showing the lands proposed to be taken and the benefit district described in the ordinance, was filed in the Circuit Court for Jackson County. Thereafter a trial was had for the assessment of damages and benefits before a board of commissioners, in accordance with the provisions of the Charter of Kansas City. A verdict was returned October 10, 1917, in which plaintiff was allowed $395,396 as compensation for such of its lands as were to be taken. Motions for a new trial were overruled December 5, 1917, and judgment was rendered, conformably to charter requirements, confirming the verdict of the board of commissioners. Thereafter appeals to this court were taken by various property owners, all of which were dismissed May 18, 1918.

On January 1, 1918, plaintiff's real estate, so proposed to be taken for street purposes and for which the compensation had been determined by the condemnation proceeding, was assessed by Kansas City, as was all other property in the city subject to taxation, for city taxes for the year 1918. The taxes thereafter levied pursuant to such assessment amounted to $1,073. December 1, 1918, Kansas City paid plaintiff all the compensation awarded the latter in the condemnation proceeding but $1,100, which the city retained as due it on account of the taxes just mentioned and interest thereon.

The principal question arising on this record is whether the real estate out of which the controversy grows was subject to taxation as private property on January 1, 1918, or whether on that date it had become an integral part of Kansas City's system of streets and *Page 678 thoroughfares. The respondent claims that it was divested of title by the judgment rendered in the condemnation proceeding, December 5, 1917; while appellant contends that such divestiture did not occur until the compensation was paid on December 1, 1918.

I. A tax, of the kind involved in this proceeding, is a contribution required of its citizens by the State. And while we speak of property as being subject to taxation, it is the individual who pays the tax, and not his property. The property is resorted to for the purpose of ascertaining the amount of the tax with which the owner must be charged; and whenTaxes: ascertained it is imposed upon the person of thePersonal owner on account of his ownership of the property.Obligation. And this is true even when a personal judgment cannot be rendered against him therefor. [State v. Snyder, 139 Mo. 549, 552; Gitchell v. Kreidler, 84 Mo. 472, 476.] This general principle which fixes personal liability on the owner of property for the payment of taxes, aside from statutes expressly imposing it, is given distinct recognition in the provisions of the Charter of Kansas City relating to revenue and taxation, which we do not deem it necessary to quote.

II. We come now to consider whether respondent was liable to Kansas City for taxes because of ownership, on January 1, 1918, of the land giving rise to this controversy. The charter provides that upon the return of a verdict in a condemnation proceeding a judgment entered in confirmation thereof shall be, "that the city have and hold the property sought to be taken forCity Taxes: the purpose specified in the ordinance providingLevied Against for the improvement and pay therefor the amountCondemned assessed against the city and full compensationLands. therefor." Such judgment, respondent insists, immediately divests the landowner of the title and vests it in the city, for the contemplated public use, subject to the payment of compensation. In this connection it is *Page 679 said that after the rendition of such judgment the owner's holding is merely permissive, that his status is in effect that of a mortgagee in possession. [In re Paseo, 78 Mo. App. 518.] Some such analogies have been drawn in cases dealing with the elements that go to make up "just compensation," but we are here considering what effect such a judgment had with respect to transferring the actual ownership of the land. So far as the title to the land was concerned the condemnation proceeding was still in fieri on January 1, 1918. Not only were appeals depending, but the city had a right under its charter to abandon the contemplated public improvement, by repealing the ordinance providing therefor, at any time before the judgment for benefits was paid. And entirely aside from that, the Constitution explicitly provides that until the compensation shall be paid to the owner or into court for his use "the property shall not be disturbed or the proprietary rights of the owner therein divested." [Constitution, Art. II, sec. 21.] Its language is so plain and unambiguous that there is no room for construction. There can, therefore, be no divestiture of the owner's title or proprietary rights through the exercise of the power of eminent domain except, and until, actual payment be made of compensation previously ascertained in the manner required by law; until such payment is made the owner's rights remain unimpaired. [Kansas City v. Ward, 134 Mo. 172, 183; Buchanan v. Kansas City,208 Mo. 674, 682; State v. Hug, 44 Mo. 116, 120.]

Respondent argues, however, that since the judgment of condemnation, in its practical working, actually deprives the owner of many of the incidents of ownership, as for an example, the right to sell, or incumber, or improve, or lease for a definite term, the constitutional provision, which was adopted for his protection, should not be held to mean that he is not in fact divested of his proprietary rights before the payment of compensation; on the contrary it should be construed as simply providing for the retention by the owner of a proprietary interest in the property as security for such payment. The trouble with this position is that the relation of *Page 680 debtor and creditor does not at any time exist between the condemnor and the landowner. Within the contemplation of the Constitution the taking of private property for a public use upon the payment of just compensation is a cash transaction. While time is necessarily consumed in determining what the just compensation is, yet when it is ascertained the condemnor is under no obligation to pay it. He may thereafter, within such time as is prescribed by the law applicable to the particular proceeding, exercise his option to pay and take the property, or abandon it. The landowner's plight, pending a proceeding to condemn his property for a public use, is aptly described by LAMM, J., in Brunn v. Kansas, 216 Mo. 108, 119:

"The filing of the petition to condemn and notice to the defendants was in the nature of a caveat to all concerned, including the world at large, that the city had laid its hands on the property and that the proceedings might ripen into a sequestration of it. Beginning from that time the owner's right to sell would be whittled away, his right to improve and develop the property would be in abeyance. After judgment and pending appeal he would hold but a base or qualified fee subject to all inconvenience and injury having their root in that fact. Finally, when the proceedings were dismissed by an election of the city not to go on with its scheme, the landowner, pinched in pocket, would have nothing but his memory of troubles and detriment suffered. But all these things are but incidents of the exercise of the right of eminent domain, to which right every rood of land in a civilized state is subject."

From what has been said it must be reasonably clear that the condemnation proceeding and the judgment therein merely hampered respondent in the use of its property; they did not deprive it of ownership, and it was the ownership, primarily, and not the productiveness, or the unfettered use of the property, that gave rise to respondent's liability for the payment of the tax.

III. Respondent presses still another argument: That by relation the payment of the award by the city on *Page 681 December 1, 1918, operated to divest respondent of title as of the date of the judgment. With respect to this, it should not be forgotten that relation is merely a fiction of the lawRelation. resorted to for the promotion of justice. [Gibson v. Chouteau, 80 U.S. 92, 100.] It could no doubt have been properly invoked by the city, upon the taking over of the land, to cut off claims made through or under the former owner adversely affecting the title, had any such arisen or had their inception subsequently to the date of the judgment of condemnation. It could likewise have been rightfully made use of by the respondent to prevent the impairment or reduction of its compensation as fixed and determined by the judgment on account of conditions subsequently arising, as for example, the fastening upon it of the lien of a special tax bill for benefits accruing on account of public improvements which were not in contemplation, or were not considered, in the assessment of such compensation. [In re Paseo, supra; Municipal Securities Corporation v. Kansas City, 265 Mo. 552.] But we are not persuaded that there is any principle of justice or equity which calls for a resort to this "fiction" in order to relieve respondent from the obligation of making such contribution to the support of municipal government as is required by the plain letter of the law.

IV. When the city elected to take over the real estate and pay the compensation previously ascertained, the tax for the year 1918 was due and owing by respondent, and had by operation of law become a lien on the property in the city'sCondemnation favor. In these circumstances the city had theAward: Reduced right to apply so much of the compensation —by Taxes Due. purchase price — in its hands as was necessary to satisfy the lien, and then pay the remainder to the respondent. This it did. As these facts appear on the face of the petition the demurrer should have been sustained.

The judgment of the circuit court is therefore reversed.Small, C., concurs; Brown, C., absent. *Page 682