80 Ala. 489 | Ala. | 1886
-The action is brought by appellee to recover damages for injury caused to his property by cutting-down, under the direction of the City Council of Montgomery, the adjacent sidewalk in front thereof. The street on which the lot of plaintiff is situated is within the corporate limits of the city, was dedicated to the public more than half a century ago, and has been continuously used and recognized as a public street. The level of the other part of the street is, and has been for many years, from fifteen to twenty feet lower than the surface of the sidewalk, on which persons entered from the street by ascending a flight of steps. The sidewalk having been for several months in an unsafe condition, and dangerous to passers thereon, the City Council, upon the examination and report of the city engineer, ordered it cut down to the level of the street. The authority of the City Council to cut down the sidewalk, and the duty to do so, if necessary to put it in a safe condition, are not disputed. In the performance of the work, there was no excavation or cutting beyond the width of the street as dedicated and originally constructed, and it is not claimed, that a want of reasonable care and skill is shown. The plaintiff does not controvert the non-liability of the corporation for consequential damages, in the absence of statutory or constitutional provisions, imposing such liability. The contestation arises on the construction of the clause of the constitution requiring municipal corporations to make just compensation for property taken, injured, or destroyed, for public use.
The preceding constitutions provided: “ That private property shall not be taken or applied for public use, unless just compensation be made therefor, nor shall private property be taken for private use, or for the use of corporations other than municipal, without the consent of the owner.” The clause of the present constitution, now under consideration, should be construed in the light of the provisions of its predecessors. Under such provisions, as construed by the courts, no liability for compensation accrued, unless there was an appropriation — a taking or invasion — of the particular property. A municipal corporation was not liable to answer, for consequential damages, to the owner of property not taken, when there was no want of reasonable care and skill. Acts done by such corporations, under valid legislative authority, exercising the power of eminent domain, and not directly encroaching upon private property, did not constitute a taking, in the meaning of the constitution, and did not entitle the owner to a right of action, however much its value and use may have been impaired. The value of adjoining property might be seriously depreciated and even destroyed without right of compensation, because unac
^The practical operation of such general provisions having demonstrated, that compensation only for property taken or applied was ineffectual to protect the citizen against oppression and injustice, by reason of the abuse of the privilege, with which corporations had been invested, in disregard of the interests and rights of the individuals, the tendency is in revising the several State constitutions, to abrogate by the organic law, a rule, which has no foundation in natural justice, and rests on no sound principle of just government, or of equal administration of powers. Influenced by these considerations, the framers of the present constitution, not only incorporated the general provision of the preceding constitution, but also an additional and special provision, having reference to municipal and other corporations and individuals invested with the privilege of taking private property for public use. Section 7 of article 14 of the constitution declares: “ Municipal and other corporations and individuals invested with the privilege of taking private property for public use, shall make just compensation for the property taken, injured, or destroyed by the construction or enlargement of its works, highways, or improvements, which compensation shall be paid before such taking, injury, or destruction. The General Assembly is hereby prohibited from depriving any person of an appeal from any preliminary assessment of damages made by viewers or otherwise; and the amount of such damages in all cases of appeal shall, 'on demand of either party, be determined by a jury according to law.” This mandatory clause being a new provision — an extension for the protection of property — introduced into a revised constitution, should be liberally construed in favor of the citizen, and so as to secure the purposes intended, as ascertained from the considerations which produced its introduction. It operates a further limitation on the right of eminent domain, from which the State alone is excepted, and establishes a new rule, supported by better reason, and founded in equal justice. The words, injured or destroyed, were not used in vain and without meaning. It was intended that they should have effect, and unless they operate to impose a liability not previously existing, they are without operation. The new rule proclaimed by the constitution imposes a liability for private property injured or destroyed, though not taken — a liability for consequential damages, from which municipal corporations were theretofore exempt. The construction has ' been placed
A material question is, in what cases and under what circumstances does the constitution impose the new and additional liability % In this connection our consideration has been cited to the decisions of the courts of several of the States, as sustaining plaintiff’s contention, that a municipal corporation is liable for the injury done to an abutting lot by any grading of an established street. By these decisions, it is substantially held, that the recent constitution made no difference as to the form of the public use, and that an abutter is entitled to recover the consequential damages caused to his property by raising or lowering the grade of a street.— City of Elgin v. Eaton, 83 Ill. 335; Reardon v. San Francisco, 66 Cal. 492; Hannon v. Omaha, 17 Neb. 548; Atlanta v. Greene, Johnson v. Parkersburg, 16 W. Va. 403. It should be remarked, however, that in the subsequent-ease of Rigney v. Chicago, 102 Ill. 64, where the same question came again before that court for consideration. three of the seven justices dissented, and the Chief Justice, who concurred in the conclusion, qualified the rule in a separate opinion. The provision in the constitution of each of these several States is general and unrestricted ; “private property shall not be taken or damaged for public usef without compensation. The presumption is reasonable, that the convention, which framed the constitution, compared and considered the recent constitutions of other States. And it is significant, in view of the well settled rule respecting the liability of municipal corporations for damages done to adjoining lots not encroached upon, by changing the grade of the streets, or making other alterations, that the convention failed to ordain a provision general and unlimited, as provided in some of the constitutions, operating to abrogate in toto the previously settled rule, and adopted the qualified provision of the constitution of Pennsylvania, as sufficient to meet the requisite protection of private property, and at the same time, to answer the demands of public policy and public needs, on which is rested the right of eminent domain. In this there was a manifest intent ; which has reference to the form of the public use — the restriction of the liability of two specified cases; “the construction or enlargement of its works, highways, or improvements.” Unless the injury or destruction is produced by a construction or enlargement of some work, highway, or improvement, which is a consequence of the use of the privilege of taking private property for public use, no liability for damages arises, under the constitution.
The next inquiry is, what is, in the meaning of the constitu
In laying out a town or city into lots, streets ‘are absolutely necessary as a means of access, without which approach and enjoyment are denied to the lot-owner. They are equally necessary to its growth and development, to its trade, and the various uses and purposes, for which towns and cities are laid out and built. Land-owners, in laying out their lands preparatory to a sale of lots, withhold from sale certain parts at convenient intervals, and set them apart as streets and highways, to be kept open for the public through all coming time, as inducements to the purchase of lots; and the seller derives his compensation from the enhanced value and market price thereby imparted to the lots proper. Although there are no words of grant as to this appendent privilege, the sale of the lots, with the proclaimed attingent streets, is a complete dedication to the use of the lot-holder and the public as highways; as much so as if a deed were executed conveying the easement, or as if they had been condemned to public use under the power of eminent domain. The dedication is not restricted to the use of the street in its natural state; but is a surrender of its use to the public, as a thoroughfare — safe and convenient way for travel and transportation, extending the entire width including the sidewalks. As a rule, change of surface is essential to the proper enjoyment of this privilege, and dedication carries with it this right
It is not the intent and operation of the constitution to in fringe the existing rule as to the liability of the city for grading, altering, or improving the streets, farther than is essential to the protection of private property, and the equal distribution of the public burdens. Where land has been dedicated to the public for use as a street, the rule as to the liability of the municipality for subsequent alterations is the same, under the constitution, as if the land had been condemned under the right of eminent domain. In case of condemnation, the constitution does not operate to so restrain the power of municipal corporations over the streets, as to subject them, on each successive alteration and improvement, to liability for damages, when the same could legally, and should have been assessed on the first taking or injury of the property. A double liability is not intended, and unless all ascertainable damages are, or presumed to be assessed at once, the corporation might be made liable to a double recovery for the same injury. This rule exempts from liability for damages, arising from ordinary and reasonable changes and improvements, which may be due to the natural formation of the surface, or to the increasing wants of the public, — which injuries were capable of being foreseen and ascertained, could and ought to have been naturally anticipated, and are presumed to have been considered and included in the original assessment of compensation. Such changes or improvements are the natural and probable consequences of the uses and purposes for which the land was originally taken, and compensation then awarded ; or in case of dedication, for which the owner received consideration in the resultant advantages.— Denver v. Bayer, 2 Amer. & Eng. Cor. Cas. 465; L. & Y. Ry. Co. v. Evans, 16 Beav. 322; Lawrence v. Gt. No. Ry. Co., 16. Q. B. 643.
But the right of the municipal authorities to change the grade of a street, or alter it in other respects, is not unlimited,
It follows, that whether the lowering of the sidewalk to the level of the street is a construction of the highway is a mixed
If the plaintiff is entitled to compensation, the measure of damages is the difference between the market value of the lot before and after the lowering the sidewalk,—the diminution in value produced thereby. The falling of the brick fence, and the apprehended undermining of the house, caused by subsequent rains, are damages caused by the intervention of an independent agency, not put in operation by the act of the defendant, and too remote to be considered elements of damages.
Reversed and remanded.