If the plaintiffs’ testator could have recovered all that he was entitled to in the first action, it is, of course, a bar to the second. And this depends, chiefly, though not altogether, upon the question whether the Utica and Schenec *660 tady Railroad Company in any way transcended the authority constitutionally vested in them by the legislature. If they did, their road is a nuisance—a perpetual nuisance; and every day’s continuance of it is a legal wrong, for which they are liable in damages after they have accrued. If they did not transcend their authority, and yet, in constructing their road, have necessarily injured the rights of others, they are equally liable to respond for prospective as well as accrued damages; . and, in such case, they cannot be vexed again in a second action.
Did the Utica and Schenectady Railroad Company transcend the authority constitutionally vested in them by the legislature? If the plaintiffs’ testator owned the fee of the land over which the Turnpike Company’s road ran, at the time of the transfer of the road to the Utica and Schenectady Railroad Company, it could not be taken away from him without causing his damages to be assessed and paid; and the illegal appropriation of it would make them liable for damages in successive actions, as the damages accrued. It seems to be admitted that no such damages were assessed or paid.
The rule that owners of land bounded on public highways
prima facie
own the land to the centre of the highway is not alone applicable to ordinary highways, but also to turnpikes
(Hooker
v.
The Utica and Minden Turnpike
Co.,
The Railroad Company, therefore, having, without .compen sation to those' entitled to the' reversion of the land, constructed, maintained and operated their road upon the highway in question, acted and continued to act unlawfully, and are liable to damages from time to time as they accrued; and, on this ground, the second action is maintainable.
The'learned judge then discussed another ground on which he thought the action maintainable, notwithstanding Mahon’s recovery in a previous suit, viz., the enlargement and raising of the embankment in 1847 was a new injury for which compensation could not have been recovered in the first action.
Wright, J., was for reversal, on the ground last stated; but Selden, Denio, Davies and Welles, Js., without passing upon that question, were for reversal on the ground first stated, that the appropriation of the land for a turnpike did not authorize its use for a railroad. Comstock, Ch. J., and Bacon, J., did not sit in the case.
Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered.
