134 Wis. 369 | Wis. | 1908
The principal errors assigned npon the appeal to this conrt and the only errors necessary to he noticed are in refusing to instruct the jury as requested by the appellant and in giving to> the jury the instructions hereinafter referred to. It appeared in evidence that the respondent, a corporation organized as set forth in the statement of facts preceding this opinion and claiming certain rights in the streets of Waukesha under the ordinance there referred to, had been since the year 1898 operating upon the double-track railway in question upon Lincoln avenue in the city of Waukesha electric railway cars. These cars' were employed in interurban railway traffic between Milwaukee and Waukesha Beach and passing through the city of Waukesha. Within the city of Waukesha there was carried on during all this time with these same cars and appliances and upon these same tracks an ordinary street railway business by stopping at any street corner upon signal to receive and discharge passengers for a five-cent fare, except in the case of some special interurban trains, which occasionally and during the summer excursion season ran through the city of Waukesha without stopping. An electric street railway requires the same tracks, poles, wires, and appliances as an electric interurban railway. In physical appearance they are not distinguishable. But the law was settled in this state that an electric street railway in a street was not an easement additional to the ordinary easement for public travel or a burden on the highway for which the abutting lotowner was entitled to compensation. La, Grosse City R. Co. v. Higbee, 107 Wis. 389, 83 N. W. 701. The contrary rule prevailed with
The appellant requested the trial court to charge the jury as follows: .
“You are instructed that there is nothing in the evidence in this case that shows the existence of any special benefits to the property in question, and you are not to allow or consider as an offset against the plaintiff’s damages, if any, any benefits whatever.”
The trial court refused this instruction and the appellant took due exception, and when the charge was given to the jury much was said in a general way concerning general benefits and special benefits, followed by this sentence:
“It is for you to determine from the evidence in the case, under the instructions given you, whether or not there were, September 19, 1904, any special benefits flowing from the operation of a street railway by the defendant company affecting the market value of such property, if you find from the evidence that a railway was operated at such time as a street railway along and in front of said property appreciably affecting the market value of said property.”
The jury were thus instructed that they were at liberty to offset the damages of the appellant, if any such damages they found, by alleged special benefits in no way arising out of or flowing from the construction or operation of an interurban
The charge to the jury that the operation of a street railway on Lincoln avenue might be considered as a special benefit was also erroneous. The special benefits mentioned must be such as are caused by the construction of the public work for the installation of which it is sought to condemn the land. Special benefits which have no causal connection with this are not the special benefits referred to in the statute. Minn. Cent. R. Co. v. McNamara, 13 Minn. 508 (Gil. 468). The right to place street railway tracks, poles, wires, and appliances in this street existed by virtue of the grant of the use of the street to the Waukesha Electric Eailway Company prior to and up to the time of the taking of the same for interurban railway purposes sought to be accomplished in this condemnation. The duty to continue such street railway service under said franchise for the remainder of the fifty-year term will survive this condemnation proceeding and continue, notwithstanding that the tracks which were formerly street railway tracks will have become interurban railway tracks, and the poles, wires, and appliances, which were formerly street railway poles, wires, and appliances, will have become interurban railway poles, wires, and appliances by virtue of this condemnation. Marsh v. Milwaukee L., H. & T. Co., post, p. 384, 114 N. W. 804. This does not mean that the plaintiff is entitled to any large or extravagant
In estimating the plaintiffs damages the existence of the electric street railway with its roadbed, poles, wires, and appliances upon Lincoln avenue up to and on September 19, 1904-, and the fact that the street was subject to> that burden without compensation to- the lotowner, and to other like burdens which the municipal authorities might in their discretion impose, are to be considered as conditions existing at the time of the taking by the respondent of the tracks, poles, wires, and appliances for interurban railway tracks, poles, wires, and appliances, but not as special benefits. The fact that by the limited estate or interest taken by these condemnation proceedings the obligation to continue the street railway service for some years will remain is proper to be considered in mitigation of damages, because it thereby appears that this condemnation proceeding takes a less estate or interest in the street than would an interurban railway, which by its condemnation proceedings took the whole use of the street and extinguished by condemnation the street railway franchise. On the other hand, the perpetual nature of the right acquired by this condemnation, extending indefinitely beyond the time when the street railway franchise will expire, is also to be considered. In short, these things are to be considered in the estimate of damages as conditions affecting the property, and even when they go to ameliorate damages they should not be considered at all as special benefits.
By the Oowrb. — The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.