Metropolitan Water Company v. Kaw Valley Drainage District of Wyandotte County Kansas

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Metropolitan Water Company v. Kaw Valley Drainage District of Wyandotte County Kansas
Syllabus
848010Metropolitan Water Company v. Kaw Valley Drainage District of Wyandotte County Kansas — Syllabus
Court Documents

United States Supreme Court

223 U.S. 519

Metropolitan Water Company  v.  Kaw Valley Drainage District of Wyandotte County Kansas

 Argued: and submitted January 16, 1912. --- Decided: February 19, 1912

The Metropolitan Water Company, a corporation of the state of West Virginia, owned land which the Kaw Valley Drainage District, a corporation of the state of Kansas, desired to acquire for public purposes.

Under the provisions of the act regulating the condemnation of land, the defendant in error presented to the judge of the district court of Wyandotte county, a petition for the appointment of commissioners to value the property of the complainant, necessary to be condemned for drainage purposes. The water company immediately filed with the judge a petition to remove the case to the United States circuit court. After argument this petition was denied and commissioners were appointed. The complainant at once filed, in the United States circuit court, its bill in aid of the removal proceeding, praying that the defendant and the commissioners be enjoined from further prosecuting the condemnation proceedings. Among other things it alleged that the act violated the 14th Amendment because it deprived the complainant of his property before judicial ascertainment of its value and before payment-in that when the report of the commissioners was filed with the register of deeds, the defendant, on paying the amount of the award, could take possession of the property; and, though an appeal to the district court was permitted, the defendant could retain possession in the meantime on giving bond to pay the amount of the verdict.

To this bill the defendant demurred, and after hearing, a temporary injunction was granted, restraining the defendant from proceeding further to condemn the property of the complainant. This order was reversed by the circuit court of appeals, which, in an elaborate opinion, held that the statute was valid, and that until an appeal was taken from the award of the commissioners the proceeding was in the nature of an inquest to determine damages, and not a 'suit' within the meaning of the removal statute, and therefore not removable into the Federal court thereunder (108 C. C. A. 393, 186 Fed. 315).

The mandate directed 'that the order granting the injunction be reversed and that the cause be, and the same is hereby, remanded to the said circuit court, with directions for proceeding in accordance with the opinion* of this court.' On the return of the mandate, the circuit court sustained the demurrer, and, in allowing the appeal to this court, certified that it dismissed the bill solely on the ground of the want of jurisdiction.

Mr. Willard P. Hall for appellant.

Messrs. L. W. Keplinger and C. W. Trickett for appellees.

Mr. Justice Lamar, after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court:

Notes

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This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

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