Plaintiff has appealed from the judgment of the trial court dismissing his petition for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Jurisdiction is in this court because by his petition plaintiff seeks damages in the amount of $148,-000, Harris v. Bates,
We need to set out only the substance of the allegations of the petition. Plaintiff alleged that on May 1, 1954, he purchased approximately 250 acres of land in Clay County, Missouri, and then started to develop it as a subdivision to be known as Hamilton Heights. In doing so he “laid out, planned, located the lots, streets and sewer ways.” Shortly thereafter he was “plainly, positively and factually” told by agents of the Missouri State Highway Commission that a new limited access highway was to be constructed over a part of his land, and that he should not develoр that part which was to be used for right-of-way purposes because if he did so the improvements placed thereon would be lost to him. Thereafter plaintiff examined the plans and surveys prepared by the Highway Commission for the proposed highway, which showed that it would cross over his land, and he then “did reрlan, redesign and re-plot and rebuild his whole plan of subdividing” his land to conform to the plans of the Highway Commission. In April 1955 a representative of the Highway Commission appraised plaintiff’s property and attempted to negotiate with him for the purchase of the right-of-way over his land, but plaintiff declined because he needed more time to determine the proper price. Two weeks later he was advised that the Highway Commission “had changed its mind,” that the location of the proposed highway had been changed, and that no land of plaintiff’s was to be taken for highway purposes. Plaintiff then alleged that by reason of the acts of the Highway Commission his property has been taken for public use and has been damaged without just compensation in the amount of $148,000, for which amount he prayed judgment.
In plaintiff’s brief he states that he does not contend that the Highway Commission actually at any time physically invaded or trespassed on his property, and it is fur *871 ther stated that “the theory of appellant’s case, as alleged in his petition, is neither in tort nor in contract, but is based squarely on the proposition that private property shall not be taken or damaged, for public use, without just compensation.” We are not conсerned with the question of whether the Highway Commission is liable for the torts of its agents, and if so, whether the above alleged occurrences would give rise to a cause of action in tort. We have the sole question of whether the above acts constitute a taking or damaging of plaintiff’s property within thе meaning of Art. I, § 26, Constitution of Missouri 1945, which, in the part here material, provides “That private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation.”
Prior to 1875 the Constitution of Missouri provided that no private property ought to be taken or applied to public use without just compensation. Art. I, § 16, Constitution of Missouri 1865. Subsequent to 1870 several of the states, the first being Illinois, altered their organic law to provide that private property shall not be taken or
damaged
for public use without just compensation. II Nichols, Eminent Domain, 3d Ed., § 6.44. Missouri first adopted such a provision in 1875. Art. II, § 21, Constitution of Missouri 1875. In referring to the purpose and effect of this change, this court has stated: “The amendment must be construed and applied in view of the evils which it was designed to remedy. We have seen that before this amendment there were many cases where the
corpus
of the property was not taken, yet rights directly annexed to the property were injured, and that for such consequential damages the property owner had no remedy, because the act was authorized by law. Whether the plaintiff must now, in all cases, when claiming that his property has been ‘damaged’ for public use, show that the injury is one for which he might have maintained an action if the act had not been done by authority of law, we need not say in this case. What we do say is this: that he must show that the property itself, or some right or easement connected therewith, is directly affected, and that it is specially affected.” Van De Vere v. Kansas City,
While it is not always necessary that there be an aсtual physical taking of any part of property in order to have a taking or damaging thereof within the meaning of Art. I, § 26, Constitution of Missouri 1945, Prairie Pipe Line Company v. Shipp,
In this case plaintiff does not contend that there has been any actual or physical taking of his property. Therefore, the precise question presented is whether the following occurrences cоnstitute an invasion or appropriation of any valuable right of plaintiff for the proper and legal use of his property within the meaning of Art. I, § 26, Constitution of Missouri: (1) the preparation of plans and surveys of the Highway Commission for the construction of a proposed highway over plaintiff’s land, (2) the notice to plaintiff by the Highway Commission of its intention to construct a highway over his land and the action of the Highway Commission in making available to plaintiff its plans and surveys for the 'proposed highway, (3) the change by plaintiff of his plans for the future use of his land to conform to the plans of the Highway Commission to use a portion of his land for highway purposes, (4) the attempted negotiation with plaintiff for the purchase of the land needed for the highway right-of-way, and (5) the subsequent announcement of the Highway Commission that it had abandoned its plans to construct the proposed highway on the lands of plaintiff.
“It is the general rule that a mere plotting or planning in anticipation of a public improvement is not a taking or damaging of the property affected.” Annotation,
A close analogy to the present situation is to be found where condemnation proceedings are abandoned after they have actually been instituted, and the landowner then sеeks compensation for the damages alleged to have resulted from the pendency of the proceeding. Plowever, such a situation obviously presents a stronger case for the landowner than do the facts of this case. The rule applicable to such a sitúa
*873
tion is stated in VI Nichols, Eminent Domain, 3d Ed., § 26.45, as follows: “When condemnation proceedings are discontinued, even when there has been no disturbance of the actual occupancy of the land, the owner often suffers pecuniary loss during the pendency of the proceedings. It is difficult to find tenants and unsafe to build on the land. He [the owner] may stop work on a partly constructed building or adapt it to the proposed improvement. He is almost certain to have incurred an attorney’s fee. But it is held, in the absence of bad faith or unreasonable delay upon the part of the party which instituted such proceedings, that the owner is not
constitutionally
entitled to recover such expenses and losses; and, when the statutes are silent on the subject, no damages will be awarded him [emphasis added]. * * * The uncertainty caused by the probability that the proceedings will be carried through and the proposed work constructed over his land differs in degree only from that shared by the owners of all property, which may at any time he taken by eminent domain whenever it may chance to lie in the path of a public improvement, and the decrease in income or other loss he may suffer from such uncertainty is held to he
damnum ab-seque injuria.”
This is the rule in Missouri. See State ex rel. City of St. Louis v. Beck,
Plaintiff places particular reliance on, and cites as being “directly in point,” Gasque v. Town of Conway,
The case we have found which is the most neаrly like the pending case on the facts is Whyte v. City of Kansas,
Plaintiff does not contend that there was any physical taking of his property. He does not allege any facts from which it can reasonably be inferred that the Highway Commission has in any way invaded or appropriated any valuable property right which plaintiff had for the legal and propеr use of his property. The quantum of plaintiff’s interest in and the permissible use of his property has not in any way been reduced. What changes plaintiff made for the future use of his property in expectation that the Highway Commission would purchase or take by condemnation the right-of-way for the propоsed highway were entirely voluntary on his part, although possibly ill advised under the resulting circumstances. It has expressly been held that there can be no recovery, by reason of the constitutional provision against taking or damaging private property for public use, for loss or expense resulting from voluntаry acts of a landowner in making changes on his premises in expectation that condemnation proceedings will be prosecuted to judgment. Whyte v. City of Kansas, supra; Simpson v. Kansas City,
The judgment is affirmed.
PER CURIAM.
The foregoing opinion by STOCKARD, C., is adopted as the opinion of the Court.
All concur.
