This petition for the assessment of damages, brought pursuant to G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 79, has been reported upon questions of law following a verdict for the petitioner. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 111.
Prior to June 6, 1955, the petitioner was the owner of a tract of land in Palmer containing about thirteen acres developed as a recreation area. There were a club house and a bath house. A dam and dike had been erected to impound waters of a brook to form a pond, a filter bed, and a swimming pool.
On June 6 the respondent, acting pursuant to St. 1952, c. 354, made a valid taking in fee of about one acre, occupied by the easterly end of the pond. Damages for this taking were recovered by the petitioner in another petition under c. 79 which was tried with the one now before us.
The present petition alleges that the respondent, in pursuance of constructing a turnpike and without any formal taking, entered upon the petitioner’s land with tractors, “bulldozers,” and other large pieces of earth moving machinery, broke and opened dikes and otherwise damaged the land.
In July, 1955, a contractor in performance of a contract with the respondent came upon the land taken and began construction of an -access way to the turnpike. On adjacent property to the east was an ice pond, impounded by a dam belonging to an ice company and located along the petitioner’s easterly boundary. An eighteen inch pipe was in the base of that dam and a spillway on the top discharged water onto the petitioner’s property.
The contractor began dumping fill on the land taken from the petitioner and on the ice pond dam, thus blocking the eighteen inch pipe. When the level of the fill reached the *220 elevation of the spillway, the contractor laid an eighteen inch temporary pipe along the spillway and across the top of the fill. The contractor continued to raise the level of the fill, and by August 11 its surface was about four feet higher than the top of the ice pond dam. At that time the temporary pipe was the only means of discharging water from the ice pond to the petitioner’s remaining land.
A sustained rainy period, due to hurricane “Connie,” began on August 11 and continued until August 14. In the Palmer area at least 4.22 inches of rain fell. An expert witness called by the petitioner characterized this storm as a “one year storm,” that is, one to be expected on an average of once a year over an extended period. In the course of this storm the flow of water made a breach in the fill, and gouged a channel in the area of the temporary pipe. Fill from this channel was deposited in the petitioner’s pond, filter bed, and swimming pool. The petitioner’s dam and spillway and a bridge near the dam were left intact, but a breach had been made in a dike between the swimming pool and the pond.
On August 15, 16, and 17 the weather was fair. On August 15 the water in the swimming pool had receded to normal level. The contractor began replacing the washed out fill, and by August 18 fill and pipe had been restored to their former condition.
On August 18 and 19 occurred a second storm, known as hurricane “Diane," which caused extensive damage throughout western Massachusetts. Bridges, roads, and railroad embankments were washed out. The petitioner’s expert witness characterized “Diane” as most unusual, as “a one hundred year storm, ” of the like of which there was no record. During “Diane,” water built up behind the fill, and on August 19 began- to flow over the top of the fill “along its entire length.” Late that afternoon the contractor’s workmen began to “bulldoze” a channel in the vicinity of the temporary pipe. When the channel reached a length of about thirty feet, water rushed across the fill, gouging a deeper and wider channel. Water entered the *221 pond and filter bed, and surged over spillways on the dike between the pond and the swimming pool and on the dam at the end of the pool. The entire area was inundated. The petitioner’s dam, bridge, and swimming pool were destrayed, and there was an accumulation of fill in the pond.
The questions of law reported are: (1) Whether the petitioner may recover in this form of proceeding for the damage to his property which occurred in August. (2) Whether the damage occurring in August was damage “in the carrying out” or “in the exercise of” the powers granted to the respondent by St. 1952, c. 354. (3) Whether there was error in the charge. These questions are so interrelated that we shall consider them together.
The judge charged that the basis of the petition is St. 1952, c. 354, which created the respondent. He referred particularly to § 15, which reads: “pTj All private property damaged or destroyed in carrying out the powers granted by this act shall be restored or repaired and placed in its original condition as nearly as practicable, or adequate compensation made therefor, out of funds provided under the authority of this act. . . . pi] Any person damaged in his property by the exercise of any of the powers granted by this act may recover his damages from the Authority under chapter seventy-nine of the General Laws.”
General Laws (Ter. Ed.) c. 79, § 10, reads in part: “When the real estate of any person has been taken for the public use or has been damaged by the construction, maintenance, operation, alteration, repair or discontinuance of a public improvement or has been entered for a public purpose, but such taking, entry or damage was not effected by or in accordance with a formal vote or order of the board of officers of a body politic or corporate duly authorized by law . . . and by such taking, damage, entry, seizure, destruction or use he has suffered an injury for which he is entitled to cornpensation, the damages therefor may be recovered under this chapter.”
The respondent relies upon G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 79, § 12, the portions reading, “The damages for property taken *222 under this chapter shall be fixed at the value thereof before the taking, and in case only part of a parcel of land is taken there shall be included damages for all injury to the part not taken caused by the taking or by the public improvement for which the taking is made .... In determining the damages to a parcel of land injured when no part of it has been taken, regard shall be had only to such injury as is special and peculiar to such parcel . . . .” It is argued that the only taking was in June, for which the petitioner has been fully compensated; that the taking could not have caused the inundation in August, the damage from which was not to be foreseen by a “hypothetical willing buyer”; 1 and that an injury caused by the act or omission of a contractor is not caused by a taking or by the public improvement for which the taking is made. The respondent takes the position that its liability, if any, is in tort.
That c. 79 itself confers no right to damages upon an owner whose property is not taken by eminent domain, but that the c. 79 procedure mavJbe ma.de available by appropriate provision in another statute creating a right to such damages is clear from
Sullivan
v.
Commonwealth,
Here St. 1952, c. 354, § 15, defines the respondent’s liability, and c. 79 in § 10 provides a procedure for recovery and in § 12 states the measure of damages. We are unable to accept the narrow construction of § 12 put forward by the respondent. To look at the substance, the petitioner *223 had two causes of action, one for the original taking and another for the August damage. It would be anomalous, and it would, we think, be so unjust as not to be ascribable to legislative intent, to adopt a construction which bars recovery by one suffering “special and peculiar” injury to his land simply because at a previous time a part had been taken by eminent domain.
The language of St. 1952, c. 354, § 15, is broad enough to authorize recovery for damage sustained in August by the petitioner. In our Anew, we are not dealing Avith a statute which imposes Hability only where a taking is involved. We do not have a case like
Sullivan
v.
Commonwealth,
That the injuries sustained in August might be “special and peculiar” as distinguished from remote and consequential is manifest from many of our decisions.
Dodge
v.
County Commrs. of Essex,
We turn to the respondent’s contention that the August
*224
injuries were not caused by the taking or by the public improvement for which the taking was made. True, an injury must be the direct result of acts of the respondent authorized by St. 1952, c. 354. See
Klem
v.
Commonwealth,
Injuries due to negligence would not be authorized and should be redressed in an action of tort, a doctrine first stated in an opinion by Chief Justice Shaw.
Dodge
v.
County Commrs. of Essex,
In
Westcott
v.
Boston,
Other cases supporting the position we take are
Mellen
v.
Western R.R.
In the light of the history of our decisions we must hold that recovery cannot be had under § 15 for damages due to negligence or to other unauthorized acts or omissions in carrying out work under St. 1952, c. 354. If the Legislaturc intended to authorize recovery for tort, we would expect to find language sufficiently explicit to show a purpose to depart from long standing precedent. We would also expect to find a clearly stated limit of any permitted recovcry for torts in eminent domain proceedings, as well as a provision as to whether such permitted recovery was in addition to or in place of an action of tort. If, because of the magnitude of many modern public works projects, there should be recovery in eminent domain proceedings for tortious injuries to property not taken, the wisdom and scope ■ of such a change, involving as it does financial and other practical considerations, present broad legislative problems and not questions for judicial determination in individual cases.
The jury were correctly told in the charge: “In order to recover on this petition, it is necessary that the petitioner prove by a fair weight of the credible evidence that his property was damaged or destroyed in the carrying out or in the exercise of the powers granted the Turnpike Authority by the 1952 act. The construction of the turnpike and access roads is one of the powers granted in that act . . . [ajnd the clause 'all private property damaged or destroyed *227 in carrying out the powers’ and the words ‘any person damaged in his property by the exercise of the powers’ imply and definitely mean that there must be a causal connection between the acts of the Turnpike Authority, its agents or servants, are charged with performing and the injury or damage suffered.”
The jury were also instructed: “Now, if the damage was caused by an act of God, the . . . [respondent] is not responsible and is not to be held responsible. But even if a flood was itself so extraordinary that it can be classed as an act of God, it is still possible for the respondent to damage the . . . [petitioner] if the respondent, by its agents or servants, did some act in the carrying out or in the exercise of its powers in constructing the turnpike or the access road that was a proximate cause or was an active, efficient and potent cause of the damage done to the petitioner’s property. And if such an act was such a cause of damage, the respondent could be held responsible.” This part of the charge was erroneous in permitting the jury to find liability for a negligent act. They should have been told that damages due to negligent acts were recoverable in tort but not in the present form of action.
A further point should be mentioned. We learn in the charge, but nowhere else in the record, that there was testimany by the petitioner that persons engaged in the construction of the access road on some date or dates not given trespassed on his land, removed earth from the bottom of the fish pool, and incorporated it with the fill in the access road. The judge instructed the jury that such a trespass would not be an injury “caused by the taking or by the public improvement” under § 12. Later in the charge the judge returned to the subject and left this category of damage, along with that sustained during the two rainfall periods, to the jury to determine whether it was damage proximately resulting from the doing of “some act in the carrying out or in the exercise of its powers in constructing the turnpike or the access road.” The distinction between authorized acts and acts which give rise only to an action of
*228
tort applies equally to the removal of earth from the bottom of the fish pond. See
Daley
v.
Watertown,
The questions reported are all answered in the affirmative, and in accordance with the terms of the report the verdict is set aside and there must be a new trial.
So ordered.
Notes
See
Epstein
v.
Boston Housing Authy.
