BRAND v. UNION ELEVATED RAILROAD COMPANY
No. 268
Supreme Court of the United States
Decided June 21, 1915
238 U.S. 586
ERROR TO THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS. Arguеd May 6, 7, 1915.
But the event that happened—her death before January 1, 1910—although evidently in contemplation as a possible event, was not provided for. What then happens? The trust has failed; the trustee is functus officio; he cannot in equity retain the fund for himself; he must simply redеliver it to him from whom it came. In other words, there is a resulting trust for the donor.
The entire matter is so fully and satisfactorily discussed in the opinion of the Supreme Court of Hawaii that we need not further elaborate it.
Decree affirmed.
Syllabus.
Nothing in the Federal Constitution gives any one the right to have the jury instructed that he is entitled to damages for property taken, where the instruction is not based on some evidence or entitles him to damages without proof.
After an elevated railroad had been built in a street, the jury, in a suit brought by an abutting owner, viewed the premises, and the only testimony showed that the property was worth more after, than before, the erection of the structure; held, that the owner was not entitled to an instruction that the jury must exclude from their estimate of market value subsequent to the construction any enhancement from the facilities furnished to the property by the structure
By simply viewing property aftеr the erection of an elevated structure in front of it, a jury cannot, in the absence of any evidence other than that the property is worth more than before the structure was built, ascertain what the market value was either before or just after the erection of the structure.
258 Illinois, 133, affirmed.
The facts, which involve the right of an abutting property owner to recover damages for depreciation of his property by reason of the erection of an elevated railroаd in the street, are stated in the opinion.
Mr. Harry S. Mecartney and Mr. John S. Miller for plaintiff in error.
Mr. Roger L. Foote, with whom Mr. Addison L. Gardner, Mr. Randall W. Burns and Mr. Francis W. Walker were on the brief, for defendant in error.
MR. JUSTICE MCREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the court.
By ordinary warranty deed from Calvin F. Rice, dated November 13, 1889, Edwin L. Brand became owner in fee simple of a lot, with five-story building (No. 259), fronting east on Wabash Avenue, described as follows: “The North Twenty-five (25) feet of Lot five (5) in Block seven (7) in Fractional Section Fifteen (15) Addition to Chicago.” The record reveals no other facts concerning any rights acquired by the grantee who held possession until his death in 1900; and there is nothing to show how or conditions under which the City obtаined and holds the street. Proceeding under a city ordinance the Union Elevated Railroad Company and other defendants during 1896 and 1897 caused construction of a double-track
On October 2, 1902, plaintiffs—Brand‘s executors—commenced this common law action to recover a lump sum for damage consequent upon construction, permanent maintenance and operation of the railroad in front of the above-described premises. After alleging such construction, method of operation, noise, dust, dirt, vibration and other objectionable results the declaration concludes:
“All of which said disturbances and injuries and grievances above complained of, have continued from and since, to-wit, said October 3, 1897, hitherto, and have caused and are now causing and will henceforth continue to cause a great and permanent damage and injury to said premises and building and said rights and easements therein, and by means thereof the said real estate has been greatly reduced in market value, to-wit, in the sum of Twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000).
“And the plaintiffs aver that said defendants became and are bound to make full compensation to plaintiffs for the said loss and damage under the Constitution and Laws of the State of Illinois; but the said defendants, though often requested, have not, nor has any or either of them, рaid said loss and damage or any part thereof, but hitherto have wholly neglected and refused and still neglect and refuse to do so, to the damage of said plaintiffs of Twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000); wherefore they bring this suit.”
Twelve years after the road was put into operation and seven after institution of the cause it was brought on for hearing—November, 1909—upon a plea of not guilty. Before the premises were viewed or any evidence taken, plaintiffs’ counsel in his opening statemеnt outlining facts and issues said: “They allege and claim that the premises known as No. 259 Wabash Avenue, owned by
Without objection, the jury viewed the рremises; Brand‘s title was established by deed from Rice and right of plaintiffs to sue by their letters, etc.; copy of ordinance granting authority for construction of the railroad was put in evidence, and also street sketch showing outline and location of rails, supports, etc. Plaintiffs introduced a single witness, engaged in the real estate business, who had been agent for the property and collector of the rents since prior to the road‘s construction. He testified concerning the lоcality, the property, character of improvements, building of the road in 1896-7, operation, noise, dirt, obstruction to light, etc., resulting therefrom and the effect, the rents received, market conditions of lands in Chicago, the advance therein about 1898, etc. He declared the property‘s market value was $4800 per front foot before and for three years after the construction, and somewhat later increased to $6500. They also endeavored to prove by him values оn Michigan Avenue to the east and on State Street to the west, but this was declared inadmissible. On defendants’ motion the court directed a verdict of not guilty, stating the following reasons therefor: “Now I agree fully with your [counsel for plaintiffs] contention that the measure of damages is the difference in the value of the property in question with the structure and that without the structure. But how is that measured? What is the basis of measure of those damages? Why, it is the price before the construction and the рrice immediately afterwards. That is the readiest and most available test of determining whether or not there was damage. If there was testimony here that
The judgment of the trial court was affirmed by both the Appellate Court (169 Ill. App. 449) and Supreme Court of Illinois (258 Illinois, 133). The latter in the course of its opinion said (p. 134): “Numerous errors were assigned in the Appellate Court, but counsel for appellants stated in his brief that all of them were withdrawn except those raising the question of the correct rule for assessing damages to property not taken but affected by a public use, and this is the only question discussed in the briefs in this court. . . . [p. 135] The undisputed evidence, therefore, was that the market value of appellants’ property was not depreciated by the construction of the road. It is claimed, however, that this was the result of general benefits common to all property in the neighborhood served by the improvement, and that such benefits should not be considered in determining the dam-
The
Counsel delimit plaintiffs’ present position thus:—
“Appellants withdraw all and every their assignments of error or parts thereof as will leave open upon this record this one question, and will save all their legal and constitutional rights claimed in respect thereto, viz: Assuming that the evidence adduced on the trial and shown in this record tended inevitably and only to show that the property in question was worth as much after the railroad in question had been constructed as before
it was constructed, or as much with the railroad constructed as without it, that the cause should still have gone to the jury. Or, differently worded: That in considering the effect upon the premises in question from the railroad structure in question, the jury must exclude from consideration the enhancement in value of the property in question, if any, resulting from the facilities furnished by the improvement.”
The suit is for loss in market value consequent upon erection and operation of the elevated road and is now prosecuted upon the theory that the trial judge erred in not submitting questions of damage to the jury under positive instruction to exclude from market value subsequent to the construction such еnhancement, if any, as resulted from facilities furnished by the improvement itself. It was, of course, necessary for the court to determine whether there was any evidence upon which such loss could be found. By merely viewing the property in 1909 the jury could not ascertain its market value either before or just after the road was built, and the only testimony relating thereto showed no change occurred. Neither could the jury tell without evidence what enhancement, if any, resulted from the improvement, and the record discloses none. In the circumstances we think the refusal to give positive direction to exclude from consideration something impossible of ascertainment was clearly right.
What we have said disposes of the essential point presented by the record, and it is unnecessary to consider the broad questions discussed in argument. It may not be contended upon any theory of compensation that the Constitution of the United States gave plaintiffs the right to an instructiоn not based on some evidence or to damages without proof. The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.
I am unable to agree with the opinion of the court in this case. I think its importance justifies a brief statement of the grounds upon which my dissent rests.
In this case there was testimony tending to show that the plaintiffs’ property suffered a real and substantial damage by the erection and maintenance of the elevated railroad, and that their property right of ingress and egress was peculiarly and particularly injured by the railroad structure. Such damage was equivalent to a taking of property for a public use and required just compensation to be made for the injury sustained. Washington Ice Co. v. Chicago, 147 Illinois, 327. There is no question of the real and substantial special injury to the plaintiffs’ property, shown by the testimony, and undoubtedly developed by the view of the premises which the jury had under the direction of the court. In this attitude of the case, the jury was instructed that the plaintiff could not recover; the court proсeeding upon the theory that there was no testimony tending to show that plaintiffs’ property would not sell for as much after the construction of the road as before. The necessary effect of this instruction permitted the jury to consider appreciation in value arising from the general advantage of the structure, not only to the plaintiff, but to others of the public, similarly situated.
In the Supreme Court of Illinois this instruction was sustained upon the theory that the damages to the property might bе offset by benefits to the owner although such benefits were shared by all others similarly situated.
This court has more than once held that to take private property for public use without adequate compensation is a deprivation of due process of law within the meaning of the
Nor is it any answer to say that the proceedings in this case are in accordance with the laws of the State, in a proceeding in which the plaintiffs were allowed to appear and be heard, according to the rules of the local jurisdiction. This contention was made and met by this court in Chicago, B. & Q. R. R. v. Chicago, 166 U. S. 226, and this court has uniformly held that if the effect of the State‘s judgment was to permit the taking of property without due process of law, the form by which that result is аccomplished is of no moment, and the mere form of the proceeding, even if accompanied by full opportunity to be heard, does not convert such process into due process of law, if the necessary result has been to deprive complainant of his property without just compensation, Chicago, B. & Q. R. R. v. Chicago, 166 U. S., p. 236, and the cases therein cited; Fayerweather v. Ritch, 195 U. S. 276, 297. If the effect of the judgment of the state court has been to take the property of the citizen without compensation, no matter what form the procedure has taken, it is violative of the
If the jury were permitted to pay the plaintiffs for their special damage in general benefits enjoyed by the public as well as the plaintiffs, the result is inevitable that the plaintiffs’ property was taken without compensation. In
“In this case damage was claimed to property by the occupation of a public street with an elevated railroad. There were two classes of rights in the street; the one, the public right to use the street for travel and for that only; the other, the right of the property owner of ingress and egress, use in connection with his property аnd the appurtenant easements. If there was an obstruction to the public use for travel by the iron pillars, there could be no recovery by the owner for consequent damage, but if his right of access was impeded or interfered with or his property rendered less valuable on account of noise, vibration or other natural consequence of the construction and maintenance of the road, the damage resulting was special to that property. The thing would be а nuisance if there were no authority of law for its construction and operation, and whenever an act is done which without statutory authority would be a nuisance, the owner of property affected by it sustains a special and peculiar damage different from that sustained by the public in general and may have his action for damages resulting from his individual and distinct right. (Rigney v. City of Chicago, 102 Illinois, 64.) In this case there was a direct physical disturbance of a right enjoyed in connection with the ownership of property, and if there was any damage by reason of the disturbance of the right it was special. Against any such damage general benefits to the public, although enhancing the value of the property in question in common with other property in the vicinity could not be considered. To say that the only test is the market value of the property before and after the improvement, regardless of the causes affecting the value, necessarily charges the owner with benefits which this court has re-
peatedly held could not be done, and makes the owner contribute to a liquidation of special injuries his share of the general benefits derived from the construction and operation of the road.”
As the effect of the judgment below was to permit the plaintiffs to be paid for valuable property rights in general benefits, in my opinion it necessarily follows that plaintiffs’ property was taken without due process of law, and therefore in violation of the protection afforded by the
MR. JUSTICE MCKENNA, MR. JUSTICE LAMAR and MR. JUSTICE PITNEY concur in this dissent.
