Lead Opinion
In this case of inverse condemnation we must decide whether a property owner who loses the use of the next intersecting street which affords him access to the general system of public streets should be compensated. As we point out, although the bare allegation of a cul-de-sac does not in itself suffice to establish a compensable right, a showing of a substantial impairment of the property owner’s right of access to the system of public streets does so. Since the complaint in this case alleges such substantial impairment, it withstands a general demurrer.
Plaintiffs are, respectively, the owners, lessors and lessee of a parcel of improved real property located in the City of Los Angeles. Fronting on Vaughn Street, which runs in an easterly and westerly direction, the property is situated at the southeast corner of Vaughn and the right-of-way of the Southern Pacific Railroad, which runs north and south. Immediately to the west of the right-of-way and parallel to it, lies San Fernando Road. The property has been improved by a one-story factory building used for the manufacture of air-conditioning equipment.
At the time the plaintiffs acquired the property in 1953, and until 1959, Vaughn Street crossed the Southern Pacific right-of-way and intersected San Fernando Road. Plaintiffs and the public used this Vaughn Street crossing as a means of access to and from San Fernando Road. In April 1959 defendants placed barricades across Vaughn Street along the easterly and westerly lines of the right-of-way and closed the crossing.
We take judicial notice of the following facts, not pleaded in plaintiffs’ amended complaint, but set forth in In re G. C.
After a hearing on plaintiffs’ application the commission found that the Vaughn Street crossing ranked as 357th most hazardous of the approximately 4,500 crossings in Southern California. The commission concluded that “it is in the public interest, considering both safety factors and the needs of the [defendants] to have Vaughn Street closed and we now find that there is insufficient need for a crossing at Vaughn Street to justify the risk involved.” On August 9, 1961, we denied plaintiffs’ petition for writ of review of the Public Utilities Commission order. On March 30, 1962, plaintiffs initiated the present action for damages arising out of the closing of the crossing. The trial court sustained defendants’ general demurrer to plaintiffs’ amended complaint and entered judgments of dismissal as to both defendants. Plaintiffs appeal these judgments.
We initially dispose of two preliminary matters. First, defendants fail to sustain the contention that, since the Public Utilities Commission exercises exclusive jurisdiction to order the closing of railroad grade crossings, this court cannot adjudicate the present action. Plaintiffs do not seek an order to reopen the crossing; rather they demand damages for an invasion of a property right. The power to determine whether the plaintiffs have suffered a compensable invasion of their rights resides with the courts. (S. H. Chase Lumber Co. v. Railroad Com. (1931)
Second, defendant railroad erroneously urges that it is not a proper party defendant to the present action. Since defendant railroad was an active joint participant in closing the crossing, it is a proper party to the present litigation. (See Talbott v. Turlock Irr. Dist. (1933)
We have long recognized that the urban landowner enjoys property rights, additional to those which he exercises as a member of the public, in the street upon which his land abuts. Chief among these is an easement of access in such street. (People ex rel. Dept, of Public Works v. Symons (1960)
To designate the right, however, is not to delineate its precise scope. Not every interference with the property owner’s access to the street upon which his property abuts and
The determination of whether such substantial impairment has been established must be reached as a matter of law. The extent of such impairment must be fixed as a matter of fact. The cases have consistently held that the trial court must rule, as a matter of law, whether the interference with access constitutes a substantial or unreasonable impairment.
Substantial impairment cannot be fixed by abstract definition; it must be found in each ease upon the basis of the factual situation.
Plaintiffs contend, however, that Bacich v. Board of Control, supra,
The recognition that the easement of access includes a right not only to reach the general system of public streets, but to do so over either of the next intersecting streets in two directions, does not mean that in every case an allegation of impaired access to the next intersecting street in one direction will establish a compensable right. It will not constitute an “unreasonable interference” in the words of Rose v. State, supra,
The court’s statement in Bacich that not every cul-de-sac case is compensable supports this analysis. Thus at page 355, we acknowledged that, “One might imagine many circumstances ... in which recovery should not be permitted or where the reasons for recovery in the cul-de-sac cases might
Moreover, the court’s reliance in Bacich upon such cases as Rose v. State, supra,
That loss of access to the next intersecting street does not necessarily create a cause of action for impairment of the general right of access is further recognized by our recent holding in People ex rel. Dept, of Public Works v. Symons, supra,
We affirmed the exclusion of expert testimony regarding the decrease in value of defendants’ property caused by “such factors, among others, as the change from a quiet residential area, loss of privacy, loss of view . . . noise, fumes and dust from the freeway, loss of access over the area now occupied by the freeway, and misorientation of the house on its lot after the freeway construction. ” (Id. at p. 858; italics added.) We concluded that in the absence of a right to severance damages this testimony related to noneompensable items of damage. Thus we denied recovery because defendants’ bare showing that their property was placed in a cul-de-sac did not of itself satisfy the requirement of substantial impairment of access.
In summary, the rule which emerges constitutes one
We turn next to the application of the test of substantial impairment to the facts of the present case. Plaintiffs claim that the closing of the Vaughn Street crossing substantially impaired their right of access. They allege that “Loss of access to San Fernando Road from Vaughn Street, and from San Fernando Road to Vaughn Street, has substantially lessened and seriously impaired the free and full use by plaintiffs of their property.” Their complaint alleges the serious impact of this loss of access upon the plaintiff’s real property. Thus the complaint sufficiently pleads a loss sufficient to withstand defendants’ general demurrer.
We note, however, that certain of the complaint’s allegations incorporate items of possible damage wholly immaterial to a cause of action for impairment of the easement of access. Thus plaintiffs’ claims of lost good will and inability to obtain employees, insofar as they relate to loss of business rather than diminution of the value of plaintiffs’ real property, do not constitute legitimate elements of damage.
Plaintiffs also complain that “the closing of Vaughn Street requires trucks servicing the property of plaintiffs, and other industries along Vaughn Street, to use Bradley
The first of these contentions relates to matters already considered fully by the Public Utilities Commission (In re G. C. Breidert, Decision No. 61775, supra, 58 Cal. P.U.C. 624 (unreported)), and in any event injury to the public does not establish a compensable loss to a private landowner unless he is thereby specially injured. (E.g., Eachus v. Los Angeles etc. Ry. Co., supra,
At a time when the tremendous growth of population of this state compels rerouting and rearrangement of streets and highways, the claimed damages to property owners from loss of access to the next intersecting street and to the general system of streets must be more than formal. It must be a true loss; it must be substantial.
The judgments are reversed with instructions to overrule the general demurrers and to permit the parties to proceed in a manner consistent with this opinion.
Gibson, C. J., Sehauer, J., MeComb, J., Peters, J., and Peek, J., concurred.
Notes
An inverse condemnation action is an eminent domain proceeding initiated by the property owner rather than the eondemner. The principles which affect the parties’ rights in an inverse condemnation suit are the same as those in an eminent domain action. (See Rose v. State, supra,
See also Streets and Highways Code, section 100.3 which provides that the construction of freeways “shall not affect private property rights of access, and any such rights taken or damaged within the meaning of article I, section 14, of the State Constitution for such freeway shall be acquired in a manner provided by law. ’ ’
“ Whether a substantial impairment of a property right exists is a question for the court to determine under all the facts of the case. Once this determination has been made, its extent is then determined by the jury.” (Del Guereio, Severance Damages and Valuation of Easements, Cont. Ed. Bar, Condemnation Practice, ch. 4, p. 73.)
A similar analysis occurs in other leading right of access eases. In Rose v. State, supra,
As Within, Summary of Cal. Law, p. 2051, states, “. . . it is easier to state these propositions than to apply them.”
The implications of Symons have not gone unnoticed. In Rosenthal v. City of Los Angeles (1961)
People v. Ricciardi, supra,
Plaintiffs also claim damages for the taking of an easement over the Vanghn Street crossing and for maintenance of a nuisance. Plaintiffs have no property right in the public crossings (see City of San Mateo v. Railroad Com. (1937)
Concurrence Opinion
Although I adhere to the views set forth in my dissenting opinion in Bacich v. Board of Control,
