Heermans v. Jacksonville, St. Augustine & Indian River Railway Co.
Heermans v. Jacksonville, St. Augustine & Indian River Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
The writ of error in this case is from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Brevard County on the petition of the railway company, condemning certain land in Brevard county for railway right of way purposes. The proceedings were had under the provisions of §§1544, 1545, 1546, 1547; 1548, 1549, 1550 "and 1554, Revised Statutes. Three viewers were appointed in compliance
Afterwards, on the 13th day of June, 1894, during a term of the Circuit Court then held in said county, the plaintiff in error moved the court to set aside “the award of the viewers” in said case because: “xst. The appointment of viewers was contrary to the constitution and laws of the State of Florida. 2nd. Because said award was made on a basis of bias and prejudice to defendant.” This motion was denied, and on the 21st of November, 1894, the defendant below sued out his writ of error.
The errors assigned are: 1st. The court erred in entering the judgment of condemnation. 2nd. The court erred in refusing, on motion of plaintiff in error, to vacate the judgment and set aside the award of the viewers. 3rd. And in other matters apparent on the face of the record.
There is no question raised or presented here as to the constitutionality of that feature of the Revised Statutes. that provides for the appointment of “three viewers” to determine the compensation to be paid for the condemnation of land under the right of eminent domain. We are not called upon, therefore, to adjudicate that question, and do not mean that the disposition we
The only reasons urged here in the briefs of counsel for the plaintiff in error as to why the judgment of the Circuit Court was erroneous, are: ist. That the court erred in entering the judgment in vacation without notice to Heermans of the time and place of application therefor. 2nd. That the court below erred in not granting the motion of the defendant below to vacate said judgment and the award of the viewers because the defendant by uncontradicted affidavits presented with said motion showed that the viewers were not impartial, but were biased in favor of the railway company as against defendant. The first of these contentions, it will be observed, is new matter sprung in this court for the first time. In the motion made before the Circuit Judge for vacation of the “award of the viewers,” it was not contended that the court’s formal judgment of confirmation thereon could not legitimately be made in vacation, neither was it contended before the Circuit Judge that such judgment was entered ex parte and without notice to the defendant of the time and place of application therefor. We might dismiss this first contention with the remark that no such question being raised or ruled upon in the court below there was nothing for our determination. But even admitting that the facts of the contention are true, that the judgment was rendered in vacation and without notice to the landowner of the time and place of the application therefor, we do not think for those reasons there was error in so doing. Section 973 Revised Statutes empowers the Circuit Judges generally to exercise any jurisdiction in vacation, that does not require the intervention of a jury, that they can exercise in term time, and section 1551
The statute seems to contemplate that when there is no annulment of an award of viewers by the filing of a demand for a jury within the time limited therefor, that then there is nothing left for the. Judge to do in the premises but to enter judgment of confirmation, which follows as of course, when there is an award of viewers unassailed by a demand for the findings of a jury in its stead. The statute does not contemplate that the
The second of the reasons urged here for reversal of the judgment, vis: that it was shown by the defendant below on his motion for vacation of the award of the viewers, by uncontradicted affidavits, that the viewers were not fair and impartial, we can not consider, even if it were not already effectually disposed of in what has been already said. If there were any such affidavits presented in support of such motion, the onty way that they could be so evidenced to this court as that we could recognize or consider them, was to have preserved them in a bill of exceptions duly authenticated by the Judge below. There is no bill of exceptions in the record here, and though the alleged affidavits are recited and copied into the record by the clerk below, they form no part of the record proper in the cause, and the ipse dixit of the clerk below in reference thereto is no evidence to an appellate coitrt of their existence or use in the court below. Wiggins v. Witherington, 96 Ala. 535, 11 South.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.