265 Mass. 65 | Mass. | 1928
“On June 16, 1925, and for many years prior thereto a large elm tree, a public shade tree, stood at a point in the southerly part of . . . [Quincy Street, a public highway in North Adams] within the limits of the said highway and land of the” petitioner, “partly within the area of the sidewalk of said street and partly within the area used for vehicular travel.” The tree was “approximately sixty feet in height and about eleven feet in circumference at its base.” It was decayed in the trunk near its base and some of the roots had been severed for purposes of sidewalk construction. On June 16, 1925, the tree because of its decayed condition fell on the petitioner’s house, causing the damages sought to be recovered in this action.
The powers and duties imposed on tree wardens by G. L. c. 87 are exercised and performed in North Adams by the commissioner of public works, “who is charged with the care of shade trees within the limits of the highways of said city.” It was agreed that in December, 1925, the petitioner duly petitioned the commissioner of public works for an assessment of damages; the petition was denied, whereupon the petitioner “brought her petition . . . for the assessment and
recovery of the damages sustained.”
No question arises in this case as to the duty of the tree warden to remove a tree that stands in a public highway and is dangerous to public travel, nor is there any question as to the liability of a city or town to a traveller on the public highway who is injured by a defect in the way caused by a public shade tree. The sole question in the case stated by the parties is the liability of the city of North Adams for the injury caused to the petitioner’s house by the fall of the tree.
Under the statute, G. L. c. 87, § 3, the tree could not be removed by the commissioner of public works until after a public hearing at which the parties interested might have an opportunity to be heard. As there was no such hearing, the remedy given to the party injured in her property does not apply. That remedy is purely statutory; it is not given for mere neglect to remove a tree standing in the public highway and which falls upon the house of an adjoining owner, when there has been no public hearing. The failure of the commissioner to remove the tree did not give the petitioner a right to damages under the eminent domain statute. See Chase v. Lowell, 149 Mass. 85,
The petitioner contends that, under the statute, the commissioner was negligent in faffing to remove the tree. We do not agree with this contention. The decay was in the trunk of the tree, near its base, and there was nothing to show that this decay was visible. Even if the contention of the petitioner in this respect were true, she could not maintain her petition. A public hearing was necessary, and as this provision of the statute was not complied with, the question of the negligence of the officer was not material. See in this connection Dupuis v. Fall River, 223 Mass. 73, 75.
Judgment to he entered for the respondent.