121 Ga. 399 | Ga. | 1904
It is contended that though the General' Assembly may have authority to vacate a street by direct enactment, or to authorize its vacation by the municipal authorities, when in the exercise of this power the adjacent landowner is damaged by the loss of the right to use the land as a street, such owner must be compensated in damages for this loss. The constitution declares that private property shall not be taken, or damaged, for public purposes, without just and adequate' compensation being first paid. Civil Code, § 5729. It has been held that the vacating of a street is neither a taking nor a damaging of private property in such a sense as to authorize the adjacent landowner or others who have been accustomed to use the street to claim compensation for the deprivation of this right; that any loss resulting from the exercise of .the power to vacate a street is damnum absque injuria. Paul v. Carver, 24 Pa. St. 207; Levee Dist. No. 9 v. Farmer (Cal.), 23 L. R. A. 388; Coster v. Albany, 43 N. Y. 399; Gray v. Land Co., 26 Iowa, 387. But there is also authority for the proposition, that when' the vacating of the street occasions to the adjacent owner or others who have been accustomed to use the street such pecu
There are judges of distinguished reputation and courts of high respectability holding that the owners of property abutting upon a street have such a property in the use of the street as that the same can not be destroyed by vacating the street without compensation being made for the loss thus sustained. Van Witsen v. Gutman, 79 Md. 405; Webster v. Lowell, 142 Mass. 326; Haynes v. Thomas, 7 Ind. 38; Heinrich v. St. Louis, 125 Mo. 424, 46 Am. St. Rep. 490, 28 S. W. 626; Bannon v. Rohmeiser, 90 Ky. 48, 29 Am. St. Rep. 355, 13 S. W. 444; Lindsay v. Omaha, 30 Neb. 512, 27 Am. St. Rep. 415; Bigelow v. Ballerino (Cal.), 44 Pac. 307; Cook v. Quick, 127 Ind. 477; Pearsall v. Supervisors (Mich.), 42 N. W. 77. See also 27 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d ed.), 115. In this State it has been-held that the erection of a permanent structure in a street, which may have the effect to entirely destroy or seriously impair an existing means of access to the property of an abutting owner, is not a “taking” of private property within the meaning of the constitution. Hurt v. Atlanta, 100 Ga. 274. But in the same case it was also held that this was a damaging of the adjacent property in such a way as
The act of 1903, which confirmed the action of the mayor and council in vacating Hansell street in the City of Marietta, and authorized the municipal authorities to complete the act of vacation by relinquishing to the adjacent owners the interest of the -public in the street, was valid in every respect; and the Marietta Chair Company is and has been, at least since the date of the execution and delivery of the deed from the city, possessed of every right of property which it or its predecessors in title had in that portion of the street which was originally taken from their property, and the right of the public therein for all purposes has become completely extinguished. If Henderson, the abutting owner on the opposite side of the street, and now the complete owner of the half of the street abutting upon his property, ever had any right to demand that compensation' should be first paid him before the rights of the public in the street were surrendered, for loss of any character sustained by him, he has waived that right by allowing the vacation and abandonment of the street to become complete without resorting to the courts for appropriate relief. If he ever had the right to demand of the municipality compensation for any loss sustained by him, as a condition precedent to the closing of the street, he should have applied for an injunction before the passage of the resolution carrying into effect the legislative act, or at least before the deeds were executed which that act provided for. If he has any right to damages at all, he is remitted now to an action at law against the municipality; but on this question we now make no authoritative ruling, for the question is not before us in such a manner as either to authorize or require a ruling upon the subject. If he has such a right of action, nothing in the judgment now rendered will preclude him from asserting this right hereafter.
It is contended, however, that the original resolution of the mayor and council, the legislative act, the resolution passed sub
Neither the General Assembly nor a subordinate public corporation acting under its authority can lawfully vacate a public street or highway for the benefit of a private individual. The street or highway can not be vacated unless it is for the benefit of the public that such action should be taken. The benefit may be either in relieving the public from the charge of maintaining a street or highway that is no longer useful or convenient to the public, or by laying out a new street or road in its place which will be more useful and convenient to the public in general. If the public interest is not'the motive which prompts the vacation of the street, whether partial or entire, the act of vacation is an abuse of power, and especially, would it be a gross abuse of power if it is authorized without reference to the rights of the public and merely that the convenience of a private individual might be subserved. As the reason for vacating a highway must therefore