Opinion by
Mr. Chief Justice Lord.Our statute makes it the duty of supervisors to keep the roads in their districts open and in good repair, and to enable them to do so they are authorized by section 4092, Hill’s Code, “to enter upon any lands adjoining or near the public road, and gather, dig, and carry away any stone, gravel, or sand * * * necessary for the making and repair of any public road in their district” and section 4093 provides that “if any person shall feel aggrieved by the act of any supervisor cutting or carrying away timber or stone as aforesaid, he may make complaint thereof in writing to the county court at any regular meeting within six months after the cause of such complaint shall exist, and such court shall proceed to assess and determine the damages, if any, sustained by the complainant, and eause the same to be paid out of the county treasury.” The plaintiff contends that these provisions of the road law are unconstitutional and void, because (1) they do not provide forgiving notice to the owner whose property is taken, nor (2) for his participation in the selection or formation of the tribunal upon" which is devolved the duty of assessing his damages. Lands for highways, as well as timber, stone, and gravel with which to make, improve, or repair them, are taken *466by right of eminent domain: Cooley, Constitutional Limitations, 657. By the constitution of this state it is provided that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation, and, except in case of the state, without such compensation first assessed and tendered : Article I., section 18, Constitution of Oregon. Under this provision the private property of the citizen cannot be taken against his will for any purpose other than a public use, nor, except in case of the state, without just compensation first assessed and tendered. With the state it is not a condition precedent that the compensation should precede or be concurrent with the taking of private property for public use. It may appropriate such property without compensation being first assessed and tendered, but it must make provision by which the party whose property has been seized can obtain just compensation for it. Nor is this all; when the public exigencies demand the taking of private property for public use, it must be done by due process of law. The constitution of the United States provides that the “ state shall not deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law”: Article XIV., section 1, Amendments. “Due process of law,” Earle, J., said, “is not confined to judicial proceedings, but extends to every case which may deprive a citizen of life, liberty, or property, whether the proceeding be judicial, administrative, or executive in its nature,” and that, generally stated, it meant “an orderly proceeding, adapted to the nature of the case, in which the citizen has an opportunity to be heard, and to defend, enforce, and protect his rights ”: Stuart v. Palmer, 74 N. Y. 191, 30 Am. Rep. 289. Consistent with these principles, the property of a citizen cannot be taken by the power of eminent domain without some notice to the owner, or some opportunity being afforded him, at some stage of the proceeding, to be heard as to the compensa*467tion to be awarded him. When the public appropriates property to improve or repair a public highway, the owner is entitled to a hearing as to the compensation which he is to receive. "Upon the question of compensation, Mr. Lewis says: “All the authorities agree that the owner is entitled to be heard as a matter of right, and consequently that he is entitled to such notice as will give him an opportunity to be heard ”: Lewis on Eminent Domain, § 366. While, therefore, the state, when taking private property for a public use, or a county by its authority, is not bound to make or tender compensation before its actual appropriation, yet,, as the citizen cannot be arbitrarily deprived of his property, it must make provision by law whereby the owner can have a hearing or be heard before an impartial tribunal as to the just compensation to be awarded him.
By section 4093, Hill’s Code, the state has afforded an opportunity to any person aggrieved by the act of any supervisor in entering upon his land and carrying away gravel, etc., pursuant to the provisions of section 4092, to be heard, and his grievance considered by the county court, which is clothed with ample power to determine and assess his damages, and cause the same to be paid by the county upon complaint in writing of the person so aggrieved. This provision undeniably affords an opportunity for the party aggrieved, whose property has been taken by the supervisor, to propound his claim for compensation, and the fact that this duty devolves upon him as a preliminary step is no objection to its validity or constitutionality. It not only affords a remedy to which the party aggrieved can resort to have his compensation determined and assessed, but also provides adequate' means for its satisfaction or payment out of the county treasury without risk of loss. Hence it clearly appears that he has an opportunity to be heard as to the jusfi *468compensation which is to he awarded to him, and that he is not deprived of his property without due process of law.
But it is claimed that the owner of property taken for public use is entitled to participate in the selection of the tribunal to assess his damages, as otherwise he might be denied a fair and impartial trial, and thus deprived of the just compensation guaranteed him by the constitution. It is no doubt true that the compensation must be determined by an impartial tribunal, but, as Mr. Elliott says, “the character of the tribunal, and the manner in which its members are selected, is a matter” to be determined by the legislature, except where the constitution directs how the tribunal shall be selected and what its character shall be Elliott on Roads and Streets, 214-217. As to how the tribunal to assess the damages shall be formed, it is not necessary that the owner of the property to be affected shall be consulted. A court or judge, with or without a jury, is an impartial tribunal: Lewis, Eminent Domain, § 313. In the case at bar the county court—composed of the judge and county commissioners -^is the tribunal authorized by law to determine and assess the damages, and, when engaged in the transaction of such business, exercises judicial functions, and must be regarded as an impartial tribunal. In Kendall v. Post, 8 Or. 144, it was held that a party aggrieved by the acts of a supervisor who had taken stone from his land to repair the highway, must resort for redress to the county court while transacting county business, to determine and assess his damages, and that the statute was not unconstitutional because it authorized such court to assess the damages without a trial by jury. As the state, by the right of eminent domain, may take from adjoining lands, gravel or other suitable material for repairing public highways, and has provided an impartial tribunal for ascertaining and paying the damages suffered thereby, it *469results that the party affected must apply for redress to such tribunal and that the objections urged against the validity of the acts are not tenable. The judgment must therefore be affirmed. Affirmed.