23 Fla. 104 | Fla. | 1887
The Chibe-Justice delivered the opinion of the court:
The appellee brought suit in the county of Alachua against the Florida Southern Railway Co. for damage to real estate claimed by him in the city of Gainesville. The •declaration alleges that appellee is the owner and has been •for a long time in the possession of a lot of ground on
It seems also to be established that when no street^ or highway is specifically mentioned in' the conveyance, but the land is described by words or figures and abuts on a street, that the same rule prevails. Bisel vs. New York, &c., R. R. Co., 23 N. Y., 61.
The rule seems to be based on the supposed intention of the parties, and the improbability of the grantor desiring or intending to reserve his interest in the street when he had parted with his title to the adjoining land? Such intention will never be presumed. Ib.
1st. That when a person owns a lot on a public street of a town or city and the fee in the soil as far as the centre of the street, the laying of a railroad track along said street wholly or partly on his soil, without his consent and without taking it and paying just compensation therefor in accordance with the statute regulating the method by which private property may be taken for public use, is an unlawful appropriation of the property of such owner, and that he is entitled, to damage therefor. In such a case as the railroad unlawfully encumbers his land he is entitled to damage .for a depreciation of the market or rental value of his premises and for annoyances to his business or to family occupation. Grand Rapids & Indiana R. R. vs. Heisel, 38 Mich., 62 ; Nix vs. Lafayette, R. R., 67 Ill., 319.
2d. That where an adjacent owner of real estate on a street of a town or city is not the owner of the fee to the centre of the street, though he is not entitled as against a company laying a railroad along said street by proper authority to recover damages tor the appropriation of the soil of the street or for any incidental injury to his property from noise or smoke or like annoyances, yet he is entitled to the use of the street and may recover damages for' any special injury he may sustain, if by reason of the improper laying of said track or its improper use, his right to use it is unreasonably abridged or impeded. But in an action grounded on such’ injury the diminution of the value of the estate of plaintiff is not a ground of damage. G. R. & I. R. R. Co., vs. Heisel. Supra.
3d. When a railroad is laid along a street by competent
A former judgment on demurrer between the same parties, in a suit wherein the plaintiff claimed damages of the defendant for injury to his estate in consequence of laying and operating a railroad in the street on which his estate abutted, said plaintiff not claiming to be the owner of the fee in the soil to the middle of the street, is not res adjudicada in a suit by such plaintiff and against such defendant for damages when the declaration alleges ownership of the fee in the soil to the centre of the street. A judgment on demurrer in the first suit is no bar to a second suit when the plaintiff failed in the first suit on account of the omission of a material allegation which is supplied in the second suit. Gould vs. Evansville R. R., 1 Otto, 526.
An owner of an estate abutting on a street or highway and owning the fee in the soil to the middle of the street, while the same is subject to the use of the public for the
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, with leave to plaintiff to amend his declaration.