133 Mo. App. 527 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
This suit is for the recovery of special damages alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff in consequence of the erection and maintenance by defendant of an obstruction in the public street in front of property owned and occupied by plaintiff in Kansas City. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiff in the sum of $1,200, and the cause is here on the appeal of defendant.
The premises of plaintiff are at No. 3229 Troost avenue and consist of a lot twenty feet by one hundred and fifty feet and a two-story brick business building thereon. Plaintiff operates a confectionery store in the building and lives over the store. The property is on the east side of Troost avenue and, has a frontage of twenty feet on that thoroughfare. The property immediately to the south is owned by defendant, a street
“That the defendant, on or about September, 1902, wrongfully and unlawfully constructed and has since wrongfully and unlawfully maintained a switch or spur across the roadway and sideAvalk of said Troost avenue in front of and adjoining plaintiff’s said lot, from the main line of said Troost avenue car line to defendant’s*531 car barn, situate on a lot adjoining plaintiff’s said lot on the south. That said switch or spur is only eight and one-half feet from the curbing at the north line of plaintiff’s said lot and from thence curves slightly to a point in the curbing at its intersection with the south line of plaintiff’s said lot. That defendant, in the construction of said switch or spur, changed and elevated the surface and grade of the roadway of said Troost avenue in front of and adjoining plaintiff’s said lot about eight (8) inches, and destroyed the roadway, the pavement, curbing and sidewalk on said street in front of and adjacent to plaintiff’s said lot. That defendant, acting by and through its agents and servants, has wrongfully and unlawfully run its cars during the day and night over said switch or spur into and out of their said barn, not for the purpose of carrying passengers, but for its private use and convenience, since September, 1902, and will continue to so use them until the year 1925. That passengers are not carried over said switch or spur; that in the passage of cars over said switch or spur, the cars extend a distance of two feet over said sidewalk in front of plaintiff’s said lot, and thereby defendant permanently appropriates that portion of said sidewalk to its private use.
“That by reason of the wrongful and unlawful construction and use of said switch or spur, and the operation of cars thereon, as aforesaid, passage over and along said Troost avenue in front of said lot is greatly hindered; that, thereby the ingress of plaintiff and his customers, and the public having business with him, to said building from said Troost avenue, is greatly impeded and rendered hazardous; that thereby plaintiff and his customers are greatly hindered in their use of said Troost avenue and the use of the sidewalk in front of said lot of plaintiff; that thereby the value of plaintiff’s said lot and the buildings thereon is greatly diminished; that defendant has not paid or tendered plain*532 tiff any compensation for the said damage to said property.
“Plaintiff states that the damage caused by the wrongful and unlawful construction and use of said switch or spur and the operation of cars thereon as aforesaid is special to him and his said property, and is not common to other property-owners along said Troost avenue.”
The answer contains a general denial and the allegation that the construction and maintenance of the switch was authorized by an ordinance of the city. The proof offered by defendant supports this allegation and the fact alleged is not 'denied by plaintiff.
The demurrer to the evidence offered by defendant was overruled and at the instance of plaintiff, the court instructed the jury “that if you believe from the evidence the plaintiff is'and was at the time hereinafter referred to, the owner and occupant of a certain lot having a frontage of twenty feet on Troost avenue and extending back therefrom one hundred and fifty feet, known and described as the south twenty feet of lot six in Linwood, an addition to Kansas City, Missouri, and the improvements thereon, and that said lot fronts on Troost avenue in said city; that defendant, on or about September, 1902, began the construction and shortly thereafter completed a switch or spur from the main line of the car line on said Troost avenue into its car barn and that the said car barn was situate on the lot adjoining plaintiff’s said lot on the south, and that said switch or spur crosses the roadway of said Troost avenue from the said car track at or near the center thereof to the east line of said street in front of and adjacent to the plaintiff’s said property, and that said switch or spur was not constructed to be used and has not been used to carry passengers thereon and was constructed to be used and has been used only for the private use of defendant in taking cars to and from
It is argued by defendant that the demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained on the ground that the facts alleged in the petition and sustained by proof fail to show the existence of any damages suffered by plaintiff of a kind different from that borne by the general public. In Placke v. Railroad, 140 Mo. 634, plaintiff, the owner of property abutting on a public street, brought suit in equity to enjoin the defendant from constructing and operating an electric street railway along the street. • The Supreme Court affirmed the judgment which was for the defendant. We quote from the opinion:
“The plaintiff relies upon Lockwood v. Railroad, 122 Mo. 86, as sustaining his claim. That case and the subsequent cases, Knapp, Stout & Co. v. Railroad, 126*534 Mo. 26, and the Schulenburg & Boeclder Lumber Co. v. Railroad, 129 Mo. 455, decide that a city has no power to authorize such use of a street as will destroy its use as a public thoroughfare, and enjoined the maintenance of steam railroads in said streets under the peculiar circumstances in each of said cases. It is a misapplication of those cases, however, to apply them to the construction of street railways unless such street railways are so defectively constructed as to prevent the current use of the highway by the public in the ordinary course of travel.
“This petition seeks to enjoin, not the construction of a street railway which is not laid at grade, or is 'to be otherwise defectively or dangerously built or laid, but the construction of any street railway, claiming that the use of the street for any such railway is an invasion of the plaintiff’s rights as an abutting owner.
“We think it must now be regarded as settled law that an electric street railway laid to grade is not an additional servitude and does not infringe upon the property rights of those whose lots abut on the street. [Dean v. Railroad, 93 Mich. 330; Koch v. Railroad, 50 Am. and Eng. R. R. Cases (Md.) 401; Lockhart v. Railroad, 139 Pa. St. 419; Railroad v. Railroad, 156 Ill. 255; Taggart v. Railroad, 43 Am. and Eng. R. R. Cases (R. I.) 213.]”
The rule approved in this and other decisions of the Supreme Court is that the construction and maintenance of a street railroad in a public street pursuant to authority granted by the city does not subject the street to a servitude different from that Avhich was contemplated in the original dedication, and the damage to an abutting oAvner resulting from such use of the street is damnum absque injuria. [Nagel v. Railway, 167 Mo. 89; Ransom v. Railroad, 104 Mo. 375; Ruckert v. Railway, 163 Mo. 260.] “The law is quite well settled that
And it is argued by plaintiff that the doctrine of this case sustains his contention that the installation and maintenance of the spur track, of itself, constituted an unreasonable interference with his right of ingress and egress. We do not think so. Defendant owned the adjoining land and likewise possessed the right of ingress and egress to and from its property. Its use of the property as a place for its barns was a legitimate use. The barns were as much a part of the railroad and perhaps as essential to the proper service of the public as were the main tracks or the cars and the
But it is alleged in the petition and the evidence of plaintiff tends to show that the track was negligently constructed and maintained in the respect that it was placed at an elevation so much above the grade of the street that it offered a serious obstruction in front of plaintiff’s property to the free use of the sidewalk. The damages inflicted on plaintiff’s property by such negligence are special damages which he is entitled to recover. The right of defendant to lay the track in the street carried with it the duty to construct and maintain it in a proper manner. Defendant had no right to increase the servitude by its negligence and an abutting owner injured thereby suffers an injury not borne by the general public.
It follows from what we have said that no error was committed by the court in overruling the demurrer to the evidence. It likewise follows that the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded on account of palpable error in the instruction given at the request
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.