1. A writ of error based on frivolous ground will be dismissed
and a penalty may be taxed against the plaintiff in error. P.
278 U. S.
192.
2. There is no basis for doubting the power of a state to
condemn places of unusual historical interest for the use and
benefit of the public. P.
278 U. S.
193.
3. Construction of state condemnation statutes by the state
supreme court
held binding on this Court.
Id.
Writ of Error to 124 Kan. 716, dismissed.
Error to a judgment of the Supreme Court of Kansas affirming a
judgment for the condemnation of plaintiff-in-error's land.
Page 278 U. S. 192
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This writ of error to the Supreme Court of Kansas must be
dismissed. The alleged grounds therefor are so lacking in substance
that they may be properly designated as frivolous.
Plaintiff in error unsuccessfully resisted condemnation by the
State of Kansas of the Shawnee Mission, a place held by the court
below to possess unusual historical interest. She claims that the
legislation under which the proceedings were conducted conflicts
with the Fourteenth Amendment, and to permit its enforcement will
deprive her of property without due process of law. Her theory is
that the assailed statutes do not adequately specify the reason for
the condemnation, and fail to reveal the use to which the property
is to be put; that it "was not taken for any specified or
particular use, and therefore for no public use."
Chapter 26, Art. 3(26-301) Kansas Rev.Stats.1923, provides:
"That the power of eminent domain shall extend to any tract or
parcel of land in the Kansas which possesses unusual historical
interest. Such land may be taken for the use and benefit of the
state by condemnation as herein provided."
And Chap. 205, Laws of 1927, declares that the land in question
possesses unusual historical interest, and directs its taking for
the use of the state by condemnation, as provided by law.
The supreme court of the state held that:
"The meaning of the statute is clear enough, that places
invested with unusual historical interest may be acquired by the
state by gift, devise, or condemnation, for the use and benefit of
the state, as places of that character. If
Page 278 U. S. 193
there were any doubt about this, the joint resolution and
appropriation act relating to acquisition of the Shawnee Mission
interpret the eminent domain statute, and show what the legislative
intention was. The state historical society is to be custodian of
the place. On taking it over, a qualified person is to make a
survey and recommend measures for proper preservation and
restoration of the Mission, and all things are to be done necessary
to and consistent with use of the place by the state as a place of
unusual historical interest."
And further that the Shawnee Mission is a place invested with
unusual historical interest, the use of which by the state is a
public one.
Under the circumstances here revealed, the construction placed
upon her statutes by the Supreme Court of Kansas is binding upon
us.
McCullough v. Virginia, 172 U.
S. 102;
Strickley v. Highland Boy Gold Mining
Co., 200 U. S. 527,
200 U. S. 530;
Union Lime Co. v. Chicago & N.W. R. Co., 233 U.
S. 211,
233 U. S. 221.
In view of what was said in
United States v. Gettysburg
Electric R. Co., 160 U. S. 668,
160 U. S. 680,
there is no basis for doubting the power of the state to condemn
places of unusual historical interest for the use and benefit of
the public.
In
John Slaker, Adm'r v. Charles O'Connor, ante, p.
278 U. S. 188, we
have referred to the statutes and rule which give us authority to
impose penalties and costs where causes are brought here upon
frivolous appeals or writs of error. The alleged ground for the
present writ is without substance, and the circumstances justify
the imposition of a penalty upon the party at fault.
The writ of error will be dismissed, and a penalty of $200,
payable to the defendants in error, together with all costs, will
be taxed against the plaintiff in error.