The proceeding, authorized by the statutes of Colorado, for
condemning land to public use for school purposes is a suit at law
within the meaning of the Constitution of the United States and the
acts of Congress conferring jurisdiction upon the courts of the
United States, which may be removed into a circuit court of the
United States from a state court.
This was an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court
remanding a cause to the state court from which it had been
removed. The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court.
On June 2, 1884, School District No. 2 in the County of Lake and
State of Colorado filed a petition in the county court of that
county against R. S. Searl, the owner of a certain lot of land in
the City of Leadville, therein described, for the purpose of
condemning the same to public use for school purposes, and praying
that the amount to be paid as compensation therefor should be
assessed according to the statute in
Page 124 U. S. 198
such cases provided. On June 10, 1884, the defendant appeared
and, being a citizen of the State of Kansas, filed his petition and
bond for the removal of said cause to the circuit court of the
United States for that district on the ground that the controversy
therein was between citizens of different states. An order for the
removal of the cause was thereupon made by the state court. On June
28, 1884, the plaintiff moved to remand the same, which motion was
granted, and the cause was thereby remanded. To review this
judgment, the present writ of error is prosecuted.
By § 3035 of the General Statutes of the State of Colorado,
the plaintiff is a body corporate, and authorized to hold property
and be a party to suits and contracts "the same as municipal
corporations in this state." The Code of Civil Procedure of that
state provides for the appropriation of private property for public
use, and authorizes a judicial proceeding in the district or county
court for the purpose of ascertaining and awarding the amount of
compensation to be paid therefor. It requires the filing of a
petition setting forth the authority of the plaintiff to acquire
the property in that mode, the purpose for which it is sought to be
taken, a description of the property, and the names of all persons
interested therein, who are to be made defendants and brought into
court by the service of a summons or other process as in other
cases is provided by law. It provides in the first instance for the
ascertainment of the amount of compensation or damages by a
commission of three freeholders, but also that before the
appointment of such commissioners, any defendant may demand a jury
of six freeholders residing in the county to ascertain, determine,
and appraise the damages or compensation to be allowed and
prescribes in such case the mode of trial at which the court or
judge shall preside in the same manner and with like power as in
other cases; that evidence shall be admitted or rejected by the
court or judge according to the rules of law, and at the conclusion
of the evidence that the matters in controversy may be argued by
counsel to the jury, and at the conclusion of the argument that the
court or judge shall instruct the jury in writing in the same
manner as
Page 124 U. S. 199
in cases at law; that motions for a new trial and to set aside
the verdict may be made and heard as in other cases; that an appeal
may be taken to the supreme court in the same manner as provided by
law for taking appeals from the district court to the supreme
court, and that a writ of error from the supreme court shall lie in
every such case to bring in review the final determination. Such a
proceeding, according to the decision of this Court in
Kohl v.
United States, 91 U. S. 367, is a
suit at law within the meaning of the Constitution of the United
States and the acts of Congress conferring jurisdiction upon the
courts of the United States. In
Boom Co. v. Patterson,
98 U. S. 403,
98 U. S. 406,
speaking of a judicial proceeding to appropriate private property
to a public use and to fix the compensation therefor, it was
said:
"If that inquiry take the form of a proceeding before the courts
between parties, the owners of the land on one side and the company
seeking the appropriation on the other, there is a controversy
which is subject to the ordinary incidents of a civil suit,"
and among such incidents, it was held in that case, was the
right, on the ground of citizenship, to remove it from a state to a
federal tribunal for hearing and determination. The same point was
ruled in
The Pacific Removal Cases, 115 U. S.
1,
115 U. S. 18. In
Gaines v. Fuentes, 92 U. S. 20, it
was held that a controversy between citizens is involved in a suit
whenever any property or claim of the parties capable of pecuniary
estimation is the subject of litigation, and is presented by
pleadings for judicial determination. The fact that the Colorado
statute provides for the ascertainment of damages by a commission
of three freeholders, unless at the hearing a defendant shall
demand a jury, does not make the proceeding from its commencement
any the less a suit at law within the meaning of the Constitution
and acts of Congress and the previous decisions of this Court. The
appointment of the commissioners is not, as in the case of
Boom
Co. v. Patterson and the
Pacific Railroad Removal
Cases, a step taken by the party seeking to make the
appropriation
ex parte and antecedent to the actual
commencement
Page 124 U. S. 200
of the adversary proceeding
inter partes, which
constitutes a suit in which the controversy takes on the form of a
judicial proceeding. Because, under the Colorado law, the
appointment of the commissioners is a step in the suit after the
filing of the petition and the service of summons upon the
defendant. It is an adversary judicial proceeding from the
beginning. The appointment of commissioners to ascertain the
compensation is only one of the modes by which it is to be
determined. The proceeding is therefore a suit at law from the time
of the filing of the petition and the service of process upon the
defendant.
The precise question involved here was passed upon and
satisfactorily dealt with by the circuit judge in the Circuit Court
for the District of Colorado in the case of the
The Mineral
Range Railway Co. v. Jones, 29 F. 193, and by the Circuit
Court for the Western District of Michigan, by the District Judge
Brown, in the case of
Railroad Co. v. Lake Superior Copper
Co., 25 F. 515.
The case was properly removed, and the motion to remand
erroneously granted. The judgment of the circuit court thereon is
accordingly
Reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court with
directions to proceed therein.