1. At tbe close of tbe testimony tbe defendant requested tbe court to direct tbe jury to return a verdict in its favor, for tbe reason-that nothing bad been shown to warrant them in rendering a verdict in favor of tbe plaintiff, which request was denied by.tbe court. Tbe court then submitted to counsel a form of verdict merely calling upon tbe jury to assess tbe plaintiff’s damages, which form of verdict counsel conceded to be correct; but counsel for tbe defendant expressly stated that tbe defendant did not consent nor concede that there was anything in tbe case for tbe jury. Such requests and claims of counsel were based upon tbe contention now made that on tbe trial of this action in tbe circuit court it was incumbent upon tbe plaintiff to prove title to tbe premises in question; and that tbe plaintiff bad failed to make such proof. On tbe part of tbe plaintiff it is claimed, in effect, that tbe petition for condemnation is a part of tbe record in this action, and that in such petition tbe defendant expressly alleged that tbe “Murray Hill Land Company” was the “owner” of such premises, and prayed tbe court to determine the defendant’s right to take tbe premises so described, under and by virtue of tbe power of eminent domain, for tbe uses and purposes therein mentioned, and that commissioners be appointed to ascertain and appraise tbe compensation to be made to tbe plaintiff, as such owner, for tbe taking of such premises; and that tbe court, in effect, determined such ownership prior to tbe trial of this action. Tbe petition filed “for tbe purpose of acquiring such title” appears to have been signed and verified, and stated “tbe names of tbe owners and parties interested” in tbe premises therein sought to be condemned, and such other facts as were required by tbe statute. Sec. 1846, Stats. 1898. “Tbe filing of such petition,” as stated in that section, was “tbe commencement of a suit in *18said court” against tie several landowners mentioned therein, Including the plaintiff in this action.' Id. “Upon the filing of such petition the said court or judge thereof” was therein required to give notice, as therein prescribed, to the several landowners and persons interested therein as mentioned in such petition. The filing of such petition has frequently been held to be essential to give the court or judge jurisdiction to appoint such commissioners to ascertain and appraise the compensation to be made to such landowners. Winnebago F. Mfg. Co. v. Wis. M. R. Co. 81 Wis. 389, 51 N. W. 576; C., M. & St. P. R. Co. v. Richardson, 86 Wis. 154, 56 N. W. 741; In re Metropolitan T. Co. 111 N. Y. 588, 19 N. E. 645; Rochester R. Co. v. Robinson, 133 N. Y. 242, 30 N. E. 1008. “On presenting such petition . . . with proof of publication of notice,” and on hearing the parties, the court was required to “determine whether the railroad corporation” was “entitled to take the whole or any part of the land sought to be acquired,” before appointing commissioners. Sec. 1841, .Stats. 1898. The statute required the report of the commissioners, including their award, to be filed in the office of the -clerk of the court, and by him recorded “in the judgment book -of such court.” Secs. 1848, 1850, Stats. 1898. The statute also provided in effect that at any time thereafter the corporation might joay to the owners of the lands so taken, or deposit with such clerk, the amounts so awarded, and thereupon enter upon and take and use the land for the purposes for which it was condemned. Id. Of course, the damages so awarded were open to modification on appeal. Secs. 1849, 1850, 1851, rStats. 1898. Obviously, the report and award of the com-únissioners constituted a part of the records in the case; and we are constrained to hold that such petition for condemnation was also a part of the records in the case.
2. Nevertheless it is contended by counsel for the defendant that the appeal from the award to the circuit court opened up the whole case for trial in that court, and hence that it was in*19cumbent upon the plaintiff to prove title to the premises or go out of court. In support of such contention counsel rely upon certain early decisions of this court. There is some plausibility in the contention. In the leading case so relied upon the plaintiff appealed from the award of the commissioners and increased his damages in the circuit court; and from the judgment entered therein the railway company appealed to this court. The trial court refused to charge the jury “that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover anything for damages to or for the lands themselves to which he had shown no title, . . . but instructed the jury that possession and occupancy under color of title were sufficient for the plaintiff to recover.” Bobbins v. M. & H. R. Co. 6 Wis. 636, 643, 644. Such rulings were there held to be erroneous; and Mr. Justice'Smith', speaking for the court in respect to them, there said:
“The party from whom it [land] is taken can, obviously, demand payment for no greater interest than he may have had therein. To enable the plaintiff to recover at all he must show some title. If it be a bare possession, or occupancy he ■certainly cannot demand and recover payment for the fee. . . . There can be no presumption of title in a proceeding of this kind. It must be shown, and compensation awarded accordingly.”
The decision of the case in this court turned upon the instructions given and instructions refused. The case thus reported fails to give the petition for condemnation or make any reference to it. The bill of exceptions and briefs of the respective counsel are contained in our collection of “Briefs and Gases,” vol. 13. But there is no reference therein to any ■such petition. The award of the commissioners is given, and they “appraised the damages sustained” by the plaintiff by the taking of the land specifically described at less than one ■eighth of what was- found by the jury. The bill of exceptions states that “the issue on said appeal” came on to be tried before a jury, but otherwise failed to state such issue. The -plaintiff was allowed to prove the .land he was .in possession *20of and tilling as a farm at tlie time of tlie construction of tlie road and the appraisal of the commissioners, and also to give in evidence certain deeds to himself, without showing title in his grantor, “for the purpose of showing that he” was “in possession with color of title.” The award of the commissioners and the assessment of damages in that action were made, under and pursuant to the special charter, to the defendant in that action. Secs. 11, 12, 13, ch. 450, Laws of 1852. That act provided that when the corporation could not agree with the owner for the purchase of the land taken, or as to the compensation to be paid to the owner, then it should “be lawful for the judge of the circuit court, . . on application of either party, ... to appoint three” commissioners to-“estimate the value of the land so taken or required by the said company, and all damages which the owner or owners thereof” should sustain or might have “sustained-by reason of the taking.” Sec. 12. But the act nowhere prescribed what should be contained in such application. It did provide that the report of the commissioners should be filed with the clerk,, and, in case there should be no appeal within the time prescribed, then the same should be recorded and judgment entered thereon. It also provided that, in case either party appealed therefrom, then such appeal should be tried in the same manner as other issues tried in said court, “and the jury impaneled to try the same” should “find the value of the land' so taken or required by said company, and the damages which the owner or owners thereof” had sustained or might sustain by the taking of the same. Id. As stated by the revisers of the Statutes of 1878, the sections of our statutes here involved were taken from the general railroad act of 1872 and the amendments thereto. As indicated, they are broadly different from such special charter, particularly as to requisites of such petition, the proceedings thereon, the effect of the award, and the vesting of title.
In Diedrich v. N. W. U. R. Co. 42 Wis. 248, cited by coun* *21sel, the title was put in issue and tried in the circuit court; and it was held by this court, on the merits, that the title asserted by the plaintiff was “not within the strip of land bounded by the natural shore of the lake,” but was “land made •outside and in front of it, upon the natural bed of the lake.” Page 261. And so the court concluded that the plaintiff had “wholly failed in sustaining his title to the' locus in quo.” Page 272. There is no intimation in that case that an admission in the petition made by a railway company for the condemnation of land of which the plaintiff is the owner is not available to the plaintiff on an appeal from the award. In fact the opinion of this court in that case makes no reference to any petition for condemnation, much less to the contents of any such petition or any admission therein. And yet the syllabus of the case is open to the inference that, “on appeal to the circuit court from the appraisal of commissioners,” the plaintiff must always make “proof of title in himself to the land taken” or go out of court. The same is true of Robbins v. M. & H. R. Co., supra, and Wooster v. Sugar River V. R. Co. 57 Wis. 311, 15 N. W. 401. In this last case the petition of the railway company stated that the plaintiff was the owner of the land and that one Bowen had, or claimed to have, a mortgage thereon. The commissioners made their award ■and apportioned the same between the plaintiff and such mortgagee. The plaintiff appealed from the award to the circuit court. On the trial in that court the amount was largely increased by the jury, but no reference was made to the claim -of the mortgagee, and the judgment thereon made no provision for the payment of anything to the mortgagee. The company appealed to this court, and assigned such failure to provide for the payment to the mortgagee as error. But it was overruled and the judgment was affirmed. It appears from the report of the ease that the plaintiff proved his title to the land, but the mortgagee was not a party and no proof was made of his interest. It was there indicated, in the opinion *22of Mr. Justice Lyon', that, “had the railroad company desired to litigate on the trial the question” of the mortgagee’s interest, it should have done so. Besides, it was there expressly stated that “no good reason” was “perceived why the defendant” might “not pay the amount of the judgment into court,, and apply to the court to order the sum awarded to” 'the mortgagee “to he paid to him” if it should “be made to appear”' that the mortgagee had “an interest in the land.” In other words, it was held that the company still had its remedy for the irregularity so complained of.
Under our statutes (secs. 1850, 1851) above referred to, the filing of the award of the commissioners in condemnation proceedings and the payment of the amount thereof by the-corporation as therein prescribed vest the title and exclusive use of the premises in the corporation, subject to the amount of the award being increased or diminished on appeal; and then the question of value relates back to the time of filing the award. This, in effect, has often been declared by this court. West v. M., L. S. & W. R. Co. 56 Wis. 318, 322, 323, 14 N. W. 292; Uniacke v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 67 Wis. 108, 29 N. W. 899; Taylor v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 81 Wis. 82, 51 N. W. 93; Neilson v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 91 Wis. 557, 559, 560, 64 N. W. 849; Stolze v. M. & L. W. R. Co. 113 Wis. 44, 52, 88 N. W. 919. The corporation is interested in obtaining a perfect title to the land for a reasonable compensation. Upon the amount of compensation being determined, the-owner or owners and the several persons interested in the land are only concerned with the distribution of the money so paid for the land. Consistent with the theory of the statutes, the title to the land should be determined before or at the time it so vests in the corporation. As already shown, the verified petition of the defendant company in the case at bar alleged that the plaintiff was the owner of all the lands in question. That admission has never been withdrawn nor disclaimed. The question recurs whether it was conclusive on the defend*23ant on the trial in the circuit court. The precise question has never been determined by this court. It has, however, frequently been determined in other jurisdictions under similar statutes. Thus it has been held in Minnesota that “the petition of the corporation, alleging title in the”, landownery “admits that fact for the purposes of condemnation.” Wilcox v. St. P. & N. P. R. Co. 35 Minn. 439, 443, 29 U. W. 148. It was there said by the court that the petition admitted the plaintiff’s title to the lots there sought to be condemned, and that “no evidence of his title was necessary to sustain his recovery.” And then, after stating that “the question of title could not be tried upon affidavits” after verdict, the court said:
“Whatever remedy the corporation may have had as against its admission of title was either through a timely and effectual abandonment of the proceedings, or by a seasonable application to the court for leave to amend the averment of title in the petition, which, in a proper case, we think might be allowed.”
To the same effect: G. B. & L. R. Co. v. Haggart, 9 Colo. 346, 12 Pac. 215; Peoria & R. I. R. Co. v. Bryant, 57 Ill. 473; Peoria, P. & J. R. Co. v. Laurie, 63 Ill. 264; 7 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 528, 574, and cases there cited; 2 Lewis, Em. Dom. (2d ed.) § 441.
In this last work it is said that “where proceedings are instituted by the party seeking to condemn the property, and it is alleged in the petition that certain persons are owners of the property desired, proof of title is dispensed with, and the petitioner is estopped to dispute the title as alleged in the petition.” These authorities are in harmony with the theory of our statutes and the logic of the decisions under those statutes. We must hold that the admission of the plaintiff’s title to the premises in question in the defendant’s petition for condemnation is conclusive in this action. In so far as the early cases in this court hold, or seem to hold, to the contrary, they *24must be deemed to be overruled. What bas been said is limited to proceedings for condemnation instituted by tbe corporation. But “where the owner takes the initiative and institutes proceedings under the statute for an assessment of damages, ... he must prove his title, unless it is admitted by the proceedings, as. that lies at the foundation of the suit or proceedings.” 2 Lewis, Em. Dom. (2d ed.) § 440. See Walton v. G. B., W. & St. P. R. Co. 70 Wis. 414, 36 N. W. 10; Taylor v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 81 Wis. 82, 51 N. W. 93.
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.