94 Wash. 84 | Wash. | 1916
In 1895, King county, in accordance with its agreement with the United States government, in aid of the proposed government canal to connect Salmon Bay with Lake Washington and Lake Union, instituted and prosecuted to final judgment three certain condemnation actions against shore land owners, paid the damages awarded therein, and conveyed to the government of the United States all rights thereby secured. Each of those actions was for the
No response was made by King county or the county attorney to the foregoing notice and, on the 19th of February, respondent began to adjust its plant, taking it up section by section so as to keep the mill running in the meantime. It would appear that there were two courses open to it. It could readjust its property to the seven-foot level, thereby protecting its property, and when the water was raised to the nine-foot level, six or eight months away, then make a second adjustment from the seven-foot level to the nine-foot level to protect itself against the last raise; or it could make all its readjustments in one, in advance, and have its mill in proper shape to meet the canal conditions when finally completed. The government had been actively engaged in building the canal for two years or more prior to February, 1915, and at that time the canal was largely dug and the locks were being constructed so as to bring the water up to the nine-foot level when completed.
It seems that the first alternative of the lumber company, that of making the readjustment in two stages, would be twice as expensive as the second, and would have resulted in the waste of thousands of dollars. Consequently the least
At the conclusion of the evidence, the court submitted this issue to the jury under the following instruction:
“You are instructed that if these necessary changes, if any, have already before the trial of this case been made, still you may consider them in estimating the property owners’ damages, if you find that those changes were made solely because of these improvements and were made prior to the trial only because such earlier alterations would reduce the damages to be caused by this improvement and because it was necessary to start making such adjustments in order to be*89 above water when the canal was opened and were not made voluntarily.”
The jury thereupon found in favor of respondent on these items and brought in a special verdict of $3,762.66 for the adjustment so made, representing that portion of the cost thereof of adjusting the property from the seven-foot level to the nine-foot level. This item of recovery is the sole subject of dispute.
It is the contention of the appellant that the respondent cannot recover damages even in the amount to which it lessened it. It contends that a property owner, learning that a condemnation suit is liable to be commenced against him aimed at acquiring a right to land by flooding it, is not entitled, prior to the commencement of the suit, to alter the condition of his buildings and, when the suit is finally instituted, prove as an element of damages the cost of raising his building above the flood level, when the work of raising was done without any assurance by the petitioners that the owner would be protected therein. Our decisions in Grays Harbor & P. S. R. Co. v. Kauppinen, 52 Wash. 238, 101 Pac. 835, and Distler v. Grays Harbor & P. S. R. Co., 76 Wash. 391, 136 Pac. 364, are cited to the effect that the rule fixing the value of the property as of the time of such trial is not only definite, but just to both the owner and the public. Moreover, it would seem that no pther construction could be adopted without doing violence to the language of our constitution. And in the Distler case, where the respondent railway company had constructed its line upon a city street without having first condemned the right to do so as against the adjacent property owners, the court held that in this state the rule applicable to condemnation proceedings is that the damages shall be ascertained as of the time of trial.
It is then contended that, the date of the trial being fixed as the time at which damages are to be estimated, the owner may improve his property to that date, and may recover the value of the improvements if taken, or their damages if they
We think appellant takes too narrow a view of the effect of our own decisions and of the provision of our constitution relating to the taking and damaging of private property for public purposes. From the beginning of our jurisprudence under our constitutional provision, we have consistently held that this constitutional provision shall be liberally construed in favor of the private property owner. The language of the constitution is to be construed liberally so as to carry out and not defeat the purposes for which it was adopted. 1 Lewis, Eminent Domain, § S60.
It cannot be said that the respondent here was proceeding voluntarily to adjust his property to the requirements of the government in the construction of the canal, for the government undoubtedly had the intention to construct the canal so as to raise the water finally to the level of nine feet above city datum. It had the acquired right to raise it to' seven feet. It was known that the right to flood the additional two feet would be positively required. The county proceeded for no other purpose than to acquire the right, which it had not acquired as to these property owners, to raise the water from the seven-foot level to the nine-foot level. It was known that, when the government should raise the water to that level, respondent’s property would be injuriously affected and damaged thereby. To have left the mill in a condition to meet the flooding of the water to the seven-foot level would have been certainly- to repeat the operation of readjusting it so as to meet the condition of raising the water to the nine-foot level. It is.a general rule in this state and.elsewhere that.the
“This is not the ordinary case of a landowner seeking damages because his inchoate and unexecuted intention to im-' prove the property in some particular manner is necessarily modified or frustrated. The work of constructing the building was actually prosecuting at the time of notice. It may be that the defendants Avere not prevented from continuing their improvement until the time the.property was actually acquired. In such case the plaintiffs would have been compelled to pay for the injury to the structure. Noav, assuming that the defendants had that right, still the fact that they adopted the other course of at once modifying their building in accordance with the notice given them by the trustees, and thus saving expenditures unnecessarily to be made, should not operate to their prejudice. Their action in proceeding at once to change the plan of the building and its construction was in the interests of the plaintiffs, as well as to their oAvn. Whatever may be the general rule governing awards in condemnation proceedings, there may be special circumstances taking, any particular case out of the rule. It would shock our sense of justice that in this case the defendants should not be allowed the actual cost and expenditure incurred by them in changing the plan of their structure.”
A like ease is found in St. Louis v. Brown, 155 Mo. 545, 56 S. W. 298. At the time of the passage of an ordinance authorizing the taking of thirty-five feet from the lot by condemnation, the owner was proceeding to erect a large build
“When this ordinance was approved, defendant Brown’s contracts were let for the construction of his building at the cost of $252,000. What was his ’ duty under the circumstances? Should he have gone on with the construction, and magnified the damages the city should pay him, either with the determination to resist the enforcement of the ordinance or with a view to making it as costly a proceeding as possible to the city? Or should he suspend all operations until the -cause and been carried through the courts, and its result definitely known? Good faith and justice demanded, in the words of this court last cited, that he should use ‘all reasonable exertion to protect himself and avert as far as practicable the injurious consequences of such act.’ . . . He took the most conservative and prudent course, gave faith to the city in carrying out its ordinance, and averted, as far as possible, the damages consequent on the city’s act. ... If he is to have no compensation here for that loss, then he is damaged to that extent by this act of the city, and he has no other redress.”
In Peck v. Chicago Railways Co., 270 Ill. 34, 110 N. E. 414, the court said:
“A person injured by another’s breach of contract or tort is bound to use reasonable care to render the injury as light as possible and to protect himself from unnecessary injury. . . . Expenses reasonably and prudently incurred in good faith in making a proper effort to diminish the loss may be recovered, whether the effort is successful or not. ... It is true that in this case there is no breach of contract or tort. The declaration makes no charge of negligence or complaint as to the manner in which the improvement was made or the skillfulness with which the labor upon it was performed. The damages must therefore be estimated under the same rules*93 as upon a petition to condemn the property. We see no reason why a different rule should prevail in such a case, and if from the evidence it appears that expenses were incurred by the appellees in good faith and the exercise of a reasonable and prudent judgment in an effort to reduce the damages, those expenses should be regarded as a part of the damages to their property.”
In Chicago, S. F. & C. R. Co. v. McGrew, 104 Mo. 282, 15 S. W. 931, the court said:
“It is the duty of one sustaining damages by reason of the act of another to use all reasonable exertion to protect himself and avert, as far as practicable, the injurious consequences of such act. ... It was, therefore, plaintiff’s duty to adjust his property to its changed condition as soon as it could reasonably be done, and in such manner as would avert such damages as could be avoided by reasonable endeavors and expense.”
We consider the reasoning of the foregoing cases exactly applicable to the case at bar, that the respondent did no more than its duty, and the appellant is in duty bound to rebate the respondent’s loss and damage occasioned it by the readjustment of its property to meet the needs specified in the condemnation proceeding. This is manifestly all that was done by the court and jury.
The verdict and judgment are therefore affirmed.
Morris, C. J., Mount, Fullerton, and Parker, JJ., concur.