Plaintiff ivas owner of a piece of land in the city of Stillwater, with the dwelling-house thereon. Defendant, having been authorized by the city to excavate a public street, running in front of plaintiff’s premises, so as to bring it to the established grade, exceeded its authority, aud excavated the same so as to bring it to a grade three and twenty-three one-hundredths feet below the established grade. The plaintiff claimed that, in consequence of the
With reference to the doctrine that the owner of land abutting upon a public street is presumably owner of the street to its centre, this court, when this action was here before, at April term, 1875, laid down the rule that, “for unlawful excavation and removal of his soil, a party is entitled to recover, not the cost of refilling, but the amount of diminution of the value of the property by the excavation and removal.”
The defendant argues that, while it is true that the rule of damages for the unlawful excavation and removal of one’s soil is not the cost of refilling, it is equally true that damages in any such case to an amount exceeding the cost of restoring the property to its former condition, together with the loss (which it insists was, at most, merely nominal in this case) resulting from the excavation and removal, during a sufficient length of time to afford reasonable opportunity to effect such restoration, must be something more
If the plaintiff had the right to refill the unauthorized excavation, and restore the street to the condition in which it was before such excavation was made, we are by no means prepared at this time to say that the defendant’s position and reasoning would not be correct. But if it is claimed that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover damages to the full amount of the diminution of value suffered by his property in consequence of the excavation as it is, because that excavation can be refilled at an expense less than the amount of such diminution of value, it is for the defendant to establish this claim ; and, in order to establish it, it must necessarily bo made to appear that the plaintiff had the right ^0 refill. This fact does not appear in this case; for, although the plaintiff owns the strip of land in which the excavation was made, it is a public street. Now, for the purposes of this case, it may be granted that, if the ■excavation had created an obstruction in the street, or had in any way rendered it impassable, it would be competent for the plaintiff to remove the obstruction, or to put the ■street in a condition to be used by the public. See Hunt v. Rich,
Older affirmed.
