Plaintiffs are the owners of business property abutting on Government Street in the City of Mobile, which they claim was diminished in market value by the construction of the ramp or approach to what is known as the Bankhead Tunnel. The averments of the complaint are substantially identical with those held to state a cause of action in McGowin v. City of Mobile,
The point here for review turns upon the ruling of the trial court overruling plaintiffs' demurrer to Plea Two interposed by the defendant. This plea reads as follows: "Two. Prior to the filing of the suit the Plaintiffs did not present to the Clerk of the City of Mobile within six months from the accrual thereof a claim upon which this suit is based, as required by Section 476 of Title 37 of the Alabama Code of 1940, and the action is, therefore, barred by the statute of non-claim."
On account of the adverse ruling of the court as to the sufficiency of this plea, plaintiffs took a non-suit, and prosecute this appeal. The plea is based upon Section 476, Title 37, Code of 1940, which reads as *Page 320 follows: "§ 476. All claims against the municipality (except bonds and interest coupons and claims for damages) shall be presented to the clerk for payment within two years from the accrual of said claim, or shall be barred; claims for damages growing out of torts shall be presented within six months from the accrual thereof or shall be barred."
It was the contention of the defendant that the claim of plaintiffs was for damages growing out of a tort and therefore governed by the latter provision of the above noted section, requiring presentation to the clerk of the city within six months from the accrual thereof. The trial court accepted this view.
But we find ourselves unable to agree. The claim of plaintiffs was for compensation, which rested upon Section 235, Constitution of 1901. As originally enacted, the property owner was compensated only for property taken or applied to a public use and no consideration given to the injury or destruction of property adjoining the public improvement. As said in City Council of Montgomery v. Townsend,
The exact question here for consideration appears never to have been directly presented for decision in this Court. Many authorities are to be found noted in 30 C.J.S., Eminent Domain, § 395, p. 105 and 44 C.J. p. 473. Some of the authorities go so far as to hold the only right of action is assumpsit, based upon an implied contract to compensate the owner for property thus injured, taken, or destroyed. Illustrative cases are Foster v. City of New Orleans,
Other authorities are to the effect, however, that when the municipality in the prosecution of a public improvement either takes or injures adjoining property without first having instituted condemnation proceedings or making just compensation to the owner, such conduct is of consequence wrongful and will support an action on the case.
But the view also seems to prevail that the property owner may waive the tort and sue in assumpsit for compensation as upon an implied contract. Illustrative of this view are: Nelson County v. Loving,
A consideration of our own authorities discloses that in cases of this character a tort action has been sustained. Dallas County v. Dillard,
In Jones v. New Orleans S. R. Co.,
And as to recovery of consequential damages for property not taken, it may well be seen that the necessity to ascertain and compensate before proceeding with the work is not at all times practicable. Illustrative is Louisville N. R. Co. v. Orr,
Conceding, therefore, that our decisions justify a tort action, yet there is nothing in any of them which militates against the conclusion that the property owner may, if he desires, waive the tort and sue in assumpsit.
As stated in 4 Am.Jur. 503: "* * * In the absence of a contractual relationship, the general rule is that where one person derives a benefit from the commission of a tort against the property of another, the law will, at the election of the person injured, imply a contract on the part of the tort-feasor to pay to the person injured a just remuneration for the damages sustained as a consequence of the wrong, and on this contract implied by law general assumpsit lies. But a promise will be implied in such a case only because it will be deemed that it was intended that it should be, or because natural justice requires it in consideration of some benefit received, and where no benefit accrues, or is intended to accrue, to the tort-feasor, the action of assumpsit cannot, as a general rule, be substituted for the proper form of action on the tort. The principle that a tort may be waived and assumpsit maintained is applied in many situations. For example, it is applied very commonly to cases of conversion and fraud, and it is also applied to some cases where there has been a trespass on land."
Among the authorities cited in the note are Fuller v. Duren,
The cases of Cooper v. Cooper,
Among the recent cases discussing this particular question is that of the Kansas court in State Highway Commission v. Puskarich
The Virginia constitution is very similar to our own, and the case of Nelson County v. Loving,
"We are of opinion that but for the statute law aforesaid, which affords an adequate remedy for the recovery of claims against the counties, either an action of indebitatus assumpsit would lie on the quasi contract implied in law from the obligation imposed on the defendant county by the constitution to make 'just compensation' in the premises (Clark on Contracts [1894 Ed.] § 311, pp. 752-755, and section 313, p. 756; 13 C.J. 244, 255), or an action of trespass on the case would lie (Swift Co. v. Newport News, supra, 105 Va. [108] at page 115, 52 S.E. 821, 3 L.R.A., N.S. 404). Accurately speaking, the cause of action in each of the cases before us arose from the disturbance or violation of the plaintiff's right which the law created as aforesaid, which is a tort (26 A. E. Ency. L. [1st Ed.] p. 72); but in such case a plaintiff, under the well-settled rule on the subject, may waive the tort and sue in assumpsit on the contract which the law implies."
We think this reasoning sound and entirely applicable to the instant case. When private property is either taken or damaged for public purposes, the Constitution is a guarantee to the owner that he shall have just compensation therefor. The municipality thus takes or injures the property with the knowledge of this guarantee and must be held to an implied agreement to abide by its terms. It is in a sense a constitutional contract made for the benefit of private property owners, and it is entirely reasonable to imply a contract on the part of the municipality in the instant case to pay the person injured a just remuneration for the damages sustained as a consequence of this public improvement, just as the Constitution guarantees.
We think it clear enough the expression in the statute "growing out of a tort" is proper to be interpreted as having reference to claims based solely upon a tort and is not to be construed as denying to one, as here, the right to waive a tort and sue in assumpsit when the situation is such as to warrant such action.
We are, therefore, of the opinion that in cases of this character the property owner has the right to waive the tort and sue in assumpsit. This right these plaintiffs have here asserted. As a consequence, it is our view this is not a tort action barred by the six months' period within the concluding clause of the statute above cited, and that the trial court was in error in ruling to the contrary. The judgment will accordingly be here reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
BOULDIN, FOSTER, and LAWSON, JJ., concur. *Page 323