Kirn v. Cape Girardeau & Chester Railroad

NORTONI, J.

The appeal is from a judgment of the circuit court overruling the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition. . It is unnecessary to set ont the petition in full and therefore, in the interest of brevity, .we will recite the principal facts out of which the controversy arises and direct attention to the objection levelled against the case as' stated by the plaintiff in his pleadings.

*273The defendant is a Missouri railroad corporation, and was engaged in acquiring a right of way for its proposed road. Desiring a portion of plaintiff’s lands for such purpose and haying failed to reach an agreement with him with respect to its purchase, it sought to exercise the right of eminent domain delegated to it by the State through the medium of the general statutes and to that end, instituted its condemnation proceeding against the plaintiff, seeking to acquire such rights in his certain lands, described in the petition. It filed its suit for the purpose in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Perry county, in which county the proposed road was to be built and the lands were situate. Summons was duly issued thereon out of the office of the clerk of such ■ court. and personally served, as is provided in section 1265, Revised Statutes 1899, upon the plaintiff herein who was defendant in that proceeding. Said summons commanded the defendant therein to appear before the Hon. Robert A. Anthony, judge of the Twenty-seventh judicial circuit and ex-officio judge of the circuit court of Perry county, on the 8th day of September, 1904, in vacation of the Perry Circuit Court at chambers in the city of Farmington in St. Francois county and then and there, before said judge to answer the petition, etc. In pursuance of such summons, both plaintiff and defendant appeared before such judge on said day, the present plaintiff appearing both in person and by counsel, and the matter having been fully pre-sented to the said judge and he, having ascertained that due notice had been given, etc., the said judge appointed three disinterested commissioners, freeholders, residents of Perry county, to assess the damages which would accrue, etc., in accord with section 1266, Revised Statutes 1899. The commissioners qualified according to law, viewed the lands, made the examination contemplated by the statute, etc., and forthwith returned their report *274under oath, in writing, signed and verified by them, setting forth the amount of damages ascertained and assessed against the railroad company and in favor of this plaintiff. After the filing of this report, the proceeding was not further prosecuted by the railroad company, but on the contrary, within ten days after the filing of such report, the railroad company, for some reason not disclosed in the petition, availed itself of its privilege under section 1266, supra, and elected to abandon the same and to that end, filed its proper instrument of writing to that effect in the office of the clerk of the Perry Circuit Court and' thereby abandoned and discontinued such condemnation proceeding. The petition very properly recites, in due form, the facts above stated, predicated thereon, and in substance, alleges that the defendant railroad, by commencing, prosecuting and abandoning such condemnation proceeding, damaged this plaintiff and subjected him to great expense necessarily incurred in the protection of his rights protecting his property, etc.; that by reason thereof he was compelled to and did employ counsel to represent him therein; that such counsel represented him therein; that he has paid his said counsel $10 cash and obligated himself in writing to pay his attorneys the further sum of $85 on account thereof for legal services and advice rendered and given in and about such proceeding; that such amount of $95 is a reasonable and proper charge, made necessary by the commencement and prosecution of such proceeding; and, second, that because of such proceeding, plaintiff was compelled to devote his time and attention to such suit for the space of five days which time he lost from his farm labors and which time is of the reasonable value of $10 and on account of these items and the premises stated, he prays judgment for $105.

The court overruled defendant’s demurrer to the petition and the defendant appeals.

The first proposition relied upon for a reversal of *275the judgment and the argument in support thereof is to the effect that while it may be true, counsel fees paid out by the landowner in such condemnation proceedings, are properly recoverable when the proceeding has been discontinued, in a suit by the landowner against the plaintiff in the condemnation suit, as an element of damage, that the principle of these cases does not penetrate to the extent sought to be invoked here, for the reason there was no actual trial of the issues before a jury, or other proceedings actually had in open court in the case stated, as appears by plaintiff’s petition, and it is said that in all of the decided cases, it' appears that something was actually done in court in and about the condemnation proceedings where the services of counsel were required. It is suggested that no such attorney’s fee was recoverable at common law and in the absence of express statute authorizing it, the rule ought not to be extended to the facts alleged. It is very true that the matter of costs is regulated by statute and it is likewise true that we have no express statutory provision authorizing the taxing or recovery of counsel fees in cases of this nature, and, as a general proposition, such fees cannot be collected in the absence of an express statute on the subject. [Waters v. Waters, 49 Mo. 385; St. Louis Brew. Assn. v. City of St. Louis, 168 Mo. 37-46, 67 S. W. 563.] Notwithstanding this, the rule of law is well established in this State, however, with respect to the matter, here in judgment, insofar as private or quasi-public corporations are concerned. It has been frequently determined by the courts of last resort that when a corporation of this nature institutes its condemnation proceeding invoking the exercise of the extraordinary power of eminent domain against a citizen and his property, for. the purpose of its own private gain and profit, whereby the propertvowner is required to employ counsel to represent his interests and protect his private rights sought to be invaded and divested from him with*276out his consent, and such proceeding is, after such expenditure on his part, dismissed or discontinued, the propertvowner upon whom the expense has been thus entailed, is permitted to recover such counsel fees from the corporation so prosecuting and dismissing the cause. The doctrine with us found its origin in North Missouri Railroad Co. v. Lackland, 25 Mo. 515. In that case, the very learned Judge Napton predicated the proposition upon a provision in the railroad charter to the effect that the court should adjudge the costs “according to equity.” [See Lackland case, supra, 534; Acts 1855, 232; St. L. Ry. Co. v. Southern Ry. Co., 138 Mo. 591-597, 39 S. W. 471; St. Louis Brew. Assn. v. City of St. Louis, 168 Mo. 37-45.] The cases generally, however, have sustained the doctrine upon the broad principle of the inherent equity in the proposition that when the corporation, clothed with and exercising such extraordinary powers delegated by the government, in which it properly resides, entails expense upon the proprietor in protecting his private property rights, and the proceeding is dismissed or abandoned, as a result of which he receives no compensation whatever, the corporation, on the plainest principles of justice, should reimburse him to the extent of such reasonable expenditure entailed by its voluntary act. Cases in point, other than those above cited, are Leisse v. St. L., I. M. & S. Ry. Co., 2 Mo. App. 105; s. c., 5 Mo. App. 585; Leisse v. St. L., I. M. & S. Ry. Co., 72 Mo. 561; Gibbons v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 40 Mo. App. 146; Owen v. Springfield, 83 Mo. App. 557; Sterrett v. Delmar, etc., Ry. Co., 108 Mo. App. 650, 84 S. W. 150. The principle announced in those cases, arising as it does from the equities of the case, extends to and properly influences the facts alleged in plaintiff’s petition. This conclusion is manifest when we consider the provisions of our statute (sec. 1266, supra), under which the proceeding is, in part, had. It is provided therein that upon the filing by the commissioners of their report with *277the clerk of the circuit court, the clerk shall record the same in the order book and the railroad company may pay the amount assessed into court and hold the lands described therein and sought to be condemned, subject, however, to the right of either party to have the commissioner’s assessment reviewed by filing exceptions thereto within ten days. So we see from these provisions that the right of actual entry and possession on the proprietor’s lands is conferred upon the corporation as against the landowner’s rights upon the report being filed and payment of the assessed damages into the hands of the clerk, and in this situation of affairs, it is quite as important that the landowners should have the aid and advice of counsel at this stage of the proceedings as at any other, to the end that he may know what his rights are in the premises and how he may proceed in order to protect them from undue invasion. He is not required to postpone employment of counsel until the corporation has actually obtained the right of entry and possession upon the lands, nor is his right to be compensated for his outlay in that behalf, deferred until there are proceedings actually had in open court. The petition is manifestly sufficient against this assignment.

It has been recently determined by this court that the necessary loss of time and earnings of the plaintiff in attending upon and looking after his interest in such proceeding is a valid element of his recovery as well. No point is made against this allegation of the petition, hoAvever, and it seems to be fully supported by the case of Sterrett v. Railway Company, 108 Mo. App. 650. It is certainly proximate and proper on the equitable principle above adverted to, on which the entire doctrine rests.

2. The second argument advanced is to the effect that the petition shows plaintiff had paid only $10 on his counsel fees and that his suit for $85 in addition thereto is premature. The allegation is that he has paid *278$10 and obligated bimself in writing to pay $85. Presumably Ms note is outstanding for this obligation of $85 balance of the fee owing to Ms counsel. The total item of $95 is alleged to be reasonable, etc. Now it has been pointediy determined that it is not incumbent upon tbe plaintiff in cases of this character to actually pay his counsel fees prior to his suit to recover the same. The doctrine is that he is entitled to be recompensed for that which he has become obligated to pay in that behalf, on account of the proceeding instituted against him and its discontinuance by the corporation. • The following cases are in point and decisive. [Leisse v. Ry. Co., 2 Mo. App. 105; Leisse v. Ry. Co., 72 Mo. 561.]

The petition is sufficient as against the assignments made against it and the judgment will be affirmed. It is so ordered.

Bland, P. J., and Cfoode, J., concur.