109 P. 879 | Cal. | 1910
Appeal by defendant, Gay, from a judgment foreclosing the lien of a street assessment. Two points made by appellant against the validity of the assessment were fully considered in Gay v.Engebretsen, (L.A. No. 2455), ante, p. 21, [
The work consisted in part of the grading of India Street in the city of San Diego. The defendant, Gay, filed a cross-complaint alleging that the plaintiff, acting under the contract for the grading of said street, had raised the level thereof about twenty feet along the frontage of Gay's lot, and had piled dirt on a part of said lot, thereby destroying said defendant's use of the street for ingress to and egress from said property, and damaging him in the sum of five hundred dollars. Plaintiff's demurrer to the cross-complaint was sustained.
The defendant sets up in his cross-complaint the provision of the specifications whereby the contractor was required to agree that loss or damage arising from the nature of the work to be done under the contract during the progress of the work and before acceptance thereof, should be sustained and borne *29
by the said contractor. A reference to our opinion in L.A. No. 2455, ante, p. 21, will be a sufficient guide to our reasons for holding that this clause has no reference to the part of the damage resulting from raising the grade of the street. Liability for such damage rests upon the city by virtue of the constitutional provision prohibiting the taking or damaging of private property for public use without compensation. Blochman v.Spreckels,
The appellant, however, urges that, independently of the raising of the street level, he has a cause of action against the contractor for the trespass alleged to have been committed in piling dirt upon the abutting property. As to this, there is the objection that the cause of action is not a proper subject of cross-complaint in an action to foreclose the assessment. That such demand cannot be asserted by way of counterclaim has been expressly decided here. In Himmelmann v. Spanagel,
While the case cited deals with the propriety of a counterclaim, the reasoning is such as to exclude equally a cross-complaint. Under section
The demurrer was therefore properly sustained.
The judgment is affirmed.
Shaw, J., and Angellotti, J., concurred.