80 Wash. 126 | Wash. | 1914
This is an action to recover damages caused by the sliding of the soil of three lots belonging to plaintiffs, by reason of the regrading of Tenth avenue south, in the city of Seattle. Two of the lots abut upon Twelfth avenue south and the other upon Eleventh avenue south. All lie upon the westerly incline of Beacon Hill. Tenth avenue south, the regrading of which necessitated a cut of over fifty feet, is located at the foot of the incline. This cut was made at a one to one slope upon the abutting property which was condemned for that slope. That slope, from the peculiar character of the soil throughout this section, was found insufficient to sustain itself. A continuing slide resulted, affecting the entire locality, including the property fronting on Twelfth avenue south, and the appellants’ lots, two blocks from the regraded street. This is the same improvement and resultant slide which was involved in the case of Casassa v. Seattle, which was twice here on appeal, and is reported in 66 Wash. 146, 119 Pac. 13, and 75 Wash. 367, 134 Pac. 1080. For a more complete statement of the facts touching the improvement and locality, reference is made to the opinion in the first Casassa appeal.
The regrade of Tenth avenue south was made in 1910. The evidence in this action tended to show that the slide
In submitting the case to the jury, the court instructed upon the theory that the failure of the city in making the regrade to provide adequate means for preventing the slide constituted negligence for the resultant damages from which the city would be liable, but that the claim was one contemplated by § 29, article 4, of the city charter, requiring the presentation to the city council and filing with the city clerk of all claims for damages against the city within thirty days after the claim accrued, and hence, also, within the purview of the act of 1909, Rem. & Bal. Code, §§ 7995, 7996, and 7997 (P. C. 77 §§133, 135, 137). The court therefore instructed the jury that there could be no recovery for any damages which were sustained prior to January 16, 1913, or more than thirty days prior to the time when the plaintiffs filed their claim. The jury found for the defendant. Judgment was entered accordingly. The plaintiffs appeal, assigning as error the above mentioned instructions.
Three questions are presented: (1) Is the filing of a
I. We have already answered the first question in the affirmative in the second Casassa, appeal, 75 Wash. 367, 134 Pac. 1080. That decision, the appellants contend, is not in harmony with our prior decisions in Kincaid v. Seattle, 74 Wash. 617, 134 Pac. 504, 135 Pac. 820; Provident Trust Co. v. Spokane, 75 Wash. 217, 134 Pac. 927, and Donofrio v. Seattle, 72 Wash. 178, 129 Pac. 1094. In each of these three cases, the taking or damaging was an indispensable and intentional part of the improvement, necessarily anticipated by the plan, and intended in the performance, of the work. In neither of these cases was there any antecedent condemnation for the right to take or damage. In all of these cases, the taking or damaging fell within the express limitation of the constitution, upon the power of eminent domain, § 16, article 1, inhibiting the taking or damaging of prívate property for public or private use without just compensation having first been made or paid into court for the owner. This provision has sole reference to such taking or damaging as is contemplated in the exercise of the power of eminent domain. It is a mere limitation upon the otherwise unlimited sovereign power to take or damage private property for public use. State ex rel. Mountain Timber Co. v. Superior Court, 77 Wash. 585, 137 Pac. 994. Without this constitutional limitation, the state could have delegated to the city the power to take or damage private property for public use without compensation, and such a taking or damaging would be no tort, nor have in it any element of tort. The
“The city is bound to make compensation under a compact no less formal than the constitution itself, and it cannot defeat this constitutional right by a charter provision or an ordinance, nor can the legislature take it away by any arbitrary requirement, although we may admit that it could, as in all other cases, fix a time within which an action must be brought to recover damages that have not been first ascertained and paid.”
The true basis of the decision, and the sum of our holding in the Kincaid case, is clearly stated early in the opinion as follows:
“Whatever its method, the city has taken respondent’s property for a public use in virtue of its sovereignty, and subject only to the limitations to be found in the constitution. When taking private property for a public use, the state acts in its sovereign capacity. Gasaway v. Seattle, 52 Wash. 444, 100 Pac. 991, 21 L. R. A (N. S.) 68; Samish River Boom, Co. v. Union Boom Co., 32 Wash. 586, 73 Pac. 670. It goes not as a trespasser, inspired by selfish or unlawful motive, but as one taking without malice or intent to do wrong and presumptively for the public good. It cannot put on the cloak of a tort feasor under the statute if it would. It cannot plead a wilful wrong to defeat a just claim.”
The above mentioned provision of the constitution was never intended to apply to consequential or resultant damages not anticipated in, nor a part of, the plan of a public work.
These considerations make it plain that this case is controlled by our decision in the second Casassa case, 75 Wash. 367, 134 Pac. 1080. In that case, the injury for which the claim was filed and for which the suit was brought was caused by the incipient stages of the same slide as that here involved. The trial court excluded evidence of an item of damages because that item was not specified in the claim filed with the city as required by § 29, article 4, of the city charter. Holding this no error, we said:
“For the full text of this charter provision and the character of claims which have been held to be included within its purview, reference is made to the following decisions: Jurey v. Seattle, 50 Wash. 272, 97 Pac. 107; International Contract Co. v. Seattle, 69 Wash. 390, 125 Pac. 152; Id., 74 Wash. 662, 134 Pac. 502; Cole v. Seattle, 64 Wash. 1, 116 Pac. 257, Ann. Cas. 1913 A. 344, 34 L. R. A. (N. S.)*133 1166. Under these decisions, the presentation and filing of the claim was an indispensable prerequisite to the maintenance of this action. They unequivocally hold that the charter provision applies to all claims for damages. This view does not impinge our decision in the recent case of Kincaid v. Seattle, 74 Wash. 617, 134 Pac. 504, 135 Pac. 820, in which we held that, where property was taken or damaged without any antecedent condemnation, it was none the less a taking in the exercise of a sovereign function, hence not tortious. For that reason, we held that the city could not impute to its own lawful act a tortious character in order to avoid liability by pleading the failure of the plaintiff to present and file a claim pursuant to the charter as a defense to the plaintiffs’ action to assess the damages for such lawful taking which should have been assessed in advance. On that ground, we held that to require the presentation of the claim as a prerequisite to the action in such a case would violate §16, art. 1 of the state constitution, providing that property shall not be taken for public use without compensation.”
The foregoing quotation is a mere paraphrase of the language last above quoted from the Kincaid case. It was before this court En Banc on the rehearing of the Kincaid case. That the opinion in the Casassa case correctly pointed out the true basis and scope of the decision in the Kincaid case, as the court En Banc then conceived, is manifested by its citation in the opinion on rehearing in the Kincaid case, 74 Wash. 628, 135 Pac. 820, without adverse comment. Considered in its relation to the original opinion and its subject-matter, nothing said in the opinion on rehearing can be construed as extending the doctrine of the Kincaid case to purely tortious injuries to private property occasioned by the prosecution of a public work. It may sometimes be thought that we too laboriously explain reasonably clear distinctions. The failure of able counsel to grasp the distinction briefly pointed out in the second Casassa opinion, which they now vigorously assail, seems to justify the more laborious course.
II. Is the filing of a claim necessary in case of progressive injury and continuing damages? This question must
“These statutes are so plain and unequivocal that they leave no room for construction. They require a compliance with both the statute and the charter.”
In Ransom v. South Bend, 76 Wash. 396, 136 Pac. 365, upon a careful review of our own decisions and decisions from other jurisdictions, we felt ourselves compelled, by the express terms of the statute, to hold the filing of the claim therein provided for an indispensable prerequisite to the maintenance of an action, quoting the following language from Ellis v. Kearney, 80 Neb. 51, 113 N. W. 803: “It is not the province of the courts to make the law or read into it exceptions not intended by the lawmakers.” There is nothing more unreasonable in the requirement of a claim in case of' continuing or progressive damages than in other cases. Within thirty days after the commencement of a pro
III. We find no error in the court’s instruction that the plaintiff could not recover for any damages sustained prior to January 16, 1913, or more than thirty days prior to the filing of the claim. The appellants contend that the effect of this ruling was to make the claim provision a thirty-day statute of limitations for damages accruing from a continuing
The requirement of reasonable notice is not subject to the ban of the due process clause of the constitution. We find nothing in the case of Doran v. Seattle, 24 Wash. 182, 64 Pac. 230, 85 Am. St. 948, 54 L. R. A. 532, militating against this view. That case merely holds that the injured party may recover damages for continuing injury as often as he brings action therefor, and is not confined by the statute of limitations to two years after the initial damage is sustained. The case has no direct relation to the question here involved. Construing the charter provision as applicable to all claims for damages and the statute as making the filing of the claim mandatory, as we do, it is manifest that the plaintiffs were only entitled to recover such damages as they were able to
The judgment is affirmed.
Cbow, C. J., Main, Gose, and Chadwick, JJ., concur.