33 S.W. 256 | Tex. App. | 1895
This suit was brought by the appellees against the appellant to recover damages for alleged injuries to certain blocks of land situated within the corporate limits of the city, by reason of alleged excavations upon the same and in streets contiguous thereto, and for the value of gravel alleged to have been carried away by appellant from said blocks and streets. The city of San Antonio answered by special exceptions, and by specific denials of the material allegations in the petition. The cause was tried before a jury,and resulted in a judgment of $2500 in plaintiffs' favor, from which this appeal is prosecuted.
The plaintiffs alleged in their petition that the defendant had unlawfully and negligently caused the gravel to be excavated from the streets around his land and from a portion of the lots in said blocks, and hauled the same away for the purpose of filling up and grading its streets in other parts of the city, and that by reason of the large amounts of gravel unlawfully and negligently taken and hauled from their property, they had been damaged in the sum of two thousand dollars. This allegation of damages was sought to be established by proving the value of the gravel taken from the lots and contiguous streets. The foregoing allegations were specially excepted to by the defendant upon the ground that they state no cause of action. The overruling of this exception is assigned as error.
Although the fee to a street may be in the adjoining lot owner, a city grading the street has the right to take from any portion of it the gravel or other material situated above the grade line, and use the same in improving or repairing that or any other of its streets, and without compensation to the owners of the property abutting on the portion of the street from whence the gravel or other material may be taken. 2 Dillon on Mun. Corp. (4 ed.), secs. 656a (note), 687 (note 2), 688, 689, and notes. And it has been held that if the city does not desire the soil for the purpose of filling in other streets, and the adjoining owner does not remove it, the city may sell and dispose of it in any way it may deem proper. 2 Dillon on Mun. Corp., sec. 689; Criswold v. Bay City,
The petition also states, "that defendant unlawfully and negligently caused the gravel to be excavated from said streets and from a portion of the lots in said blocks, and hauled the same away for the purpose of filling up and grading its streets in other parts of said city; that said excavations have been made in such manner as to leave large and dangerous holes in said streets and lots several feet deep, which were frequently filled with stagnant water, etc. That by reason of the excavations *599 so unlawfully and negligently made as aforesaid by defendant upon plaintiffs' property and the surrounding streets, and the dangerous and impassable condition in which streets have been left by said defendant, the market value of the plaintiffs' property has greatly depreciated, to the further sum of ten thousand dollars."
Defendant's fifth special exception is: "Defendant specially excepts to said petition in so far as plaintiffs therein seek to recover damages by reason of defendant's having made and left excavations and holes in certain of its streets, because said petition contains no allegations of negligence on the part of defendant in so doing, and because defendant has a legal right to excavate and leave excavations in its streets if not negligent in so doing." The appellant complains of the court's overruling this exception.
The contention of appellant, as set out in its proposition, is: "The defendant city is not liable in damages to plaintiffs for injury to their property, resulting from excavating or cutting down adjoining streets to proper grade line (of which the city is the exclusive judge) in the course of grading the streets of the city, in the absence of negligence on its part in the manner of making the excavations; nor in such case is it liable for leaving excavations and holes, though dangerous, in the streets for a reasonable time, in the absence of negligence on its part in so doing."
If it should be conceded that this proposition is correct, we hardly think the portion of the pleading complained of is obnoxious to it, for the pleading alleges that the acts complained of were unlawfully and negligently done by reason whereof the streets bounding plaintiffs' lots were left in a dangerous and impassable condition to the great damage of their property.
If such damage through negligence were the sole ground of appellees' right of recovery, we think negligence is sufficiently averred. But we cannot assent to the proposition that in this State damages to one's property caused by the grading by a city of its streets adjacent are not recoverable. Whatever may be the law in those States whose constitutions provide that private property shall not be taken for a public use without adequate compensation being first made to the owner, the law in Texas and in other States whose organic law, like ours, prescribes that "No person's property shall be taken, damaged or destroyed, or applied to a public use, without adequate compensation being made," is that if the property is "damaged," though there is no actual taking, compensation for such damages can be recovered. Cooper v. City of Dallas,
In the cases from this State, cited above, it is held that an abutting owner is entitled to damages for change of street grade, although it had never before been established, made in improving the street and placing it on proper grade. *600
The measure of damages, as was held by the trial court, in such cases is the difference between the market value of the property immediately before and immediately after the acts causing the injury. If the damage results from the projection of work in the streets on its established grade, the injury is of course permanent. But if in the progress of grading the street, it is left unfinished, and in a dangerous condition, such condition, if it affects the value of abutting property, if permitted by the city to continue for a considerable length of time, may be considered by the jury in estimating the value of the property before and after the acts causing the injury.
It follows from the rule as to the measure of damages, that the court did not err in admitting evidence to prove the value of the property immediately before and immediately after the excavations were made. If the city contemplated completing the grading commenced by the excavations within a reasonable time, and, if when finished,their alleged dangerous condition would have been obviated, it was incumbent upon the city to prove it in diminution of damages.
We think that the allegation in the petition, "that by reason of the excavations made on plaintiffs' property and in streets contiguous thereto, plaintiffs have never been able to find a purchaser therefor," is speculative in its nature, and too remote to constitute an element of damages, and that the exception to the allegation should have been sustained. We do not think that the opinion of the witness, that there was no necessity for grading the streets adjoining plaintiffs' property, "except at the margins," was admissible in evidence. It was the province of the city to pass upon the necessity of grading the street, and its exercise of the authority cannot be called in question, except in an action where an abuse of such authority is alleged and made the basis of an action.
On account of the errors indicated, the judgment of the District Court is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
JAMES, Chief Justice, did not sit in this case.