44 A. 813 | Conn. | 1899
The plaintiff alleges in her complaint, that as executrix of Thomas E. Newton she is the owner of a tract of land in the town of Orange which abuts on its easterly side a certain highway known as Union street. It appears in the case that the defendant is a railroad corporation operating a four-track railroad through the said town of Orange and across the said Union street at grade. Acting in pursuance of an order of the railroad commissioners made for the purpose of removing the said grade-crossing and another like crossing in an adjacent street, the defendant closed a portion of the said street, at a part of it where the land of the plaintiff did not abut, and changed the line of the street so as to enable travelers to pass around the closed portion. The situation can be readily seen from the following diagram, which is taken from the brief of the plaintiff's counsel. *425
[EDITORS' NOTE: DIAGRAM IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.]
That part of Union street from A to B was closed by the said order of the railroad commissioners, and the grade-crossing at that place was obviated. The new highway from A to C and from D to B furnished means of travel. Washington avenue from C to D was lowered so that the *426 highway passed under the track. The grade-crossing there was avoided; so two grade-crossings were eliminated.
The plaintiff thus states her cause of action: "By reason of the said acts of the defendant the access to and egress from the said property was seriously interfered with: . . . and the said property was rendered permanently inaccessible and of less value for rental purposes, and was greatly depreciated and damaged."
The statement of the case shows, and it is admitted, that nothing was done in that part of Union street where the plaintiff's land abuts. The access to her land in the immediate front is unchanged. It is true that distant travel to her land from the south must take a somewhat longer course. It is found and it is admitted that whatever the defendant did it did pursuant to a lawful order of the railroad commissioners to eliminate the grade-crossing in Union street and a like crossing in Washington avenue.
The defendant made several requests to charge. Of these we have occasion to take note of but two or three. One of these is that "the acts of the defendant in eliminating the grade-crossing in Union street . . . and in closing Union street, away from the land of the plaintiff's testator, done under and pursuant to said order of the railroad commissioners, in themselves furnish no right of action for which damages are recoverable by the plaintiff." Another request was that "depreciation in the value of the plaintiff's land caused or occasioned by the elimination of the grade-crossing in question, is not `special damage' for which the plaintiff is entitled to recover." The defendant also requested the court to instruct the jury that upon the whole case their verdict should be for the defendant. The court did not charge in accordance with these requests, but, in substance, charged the opposite.
"A highway is nothing but an easement, comprehending merely the right of all the individuals in the community to pass and repass, with the incidental right in the public to do all the acts necessary to keep it in repair." Peck v. Smith,
The plaintiff's land abuts on the highway called Union street. She has in that highway certain rights in common with all others of the community. For any injury to these rights she could not bring a private action. Clark v. Saybrook,
It has been said a little above, that for an injury to such rights in Union street as the plaintiff enjoyed in common with the community generally, she could not bring a private action, while for any injury to the easement of access to her land abutting on that highway she might bring such an action. Whether the injury for which the present action is brought is of the former or of the latter kind can perhaps be tested by an example. Let it be supposed that some person other than the defendant had erected a barrier across Union street within a few feet of the railroad track. Travel along Union street would be as effectually stopped by such a barrier as it is by the act of the defendant. But if such a barrier did injury to the plaintiff it would be an injury for which she could not maintain a private action. Atwood v. Partree,
It seems to this court entirely clear that the facts appearing in this case do not show any right in the plaintiff to recover damages of the defendant.
The plaintiff rested her claim that the defendant was liable to her for the injury she says she has suffered, mainly on the provisions of the defendant's charter as found in 4 Private Laws, p. 1021, § 7. We think that claim cannot be sustained. In doing the acts of which the plaintiff complains the defendant was not proceeding under that part of its charter. It was proceeding in obedience to the order of the railroad commissioners to remove a grade-crossing. It was proceeding according to the command of the sovereign power of the State to abate a dangerous nuisance. Public Acts of 1889, Chap. 220; New York N.E. R. Co.'s Appeal,
The substance of the defendant's requests to charge, hereinbefore quoted, should have been given to the jury.
There are numerous other errors assigned; but the view we have taken of the controlling questions in the case makes it unnecessary to consider any of them.
There is error, the verdict and judgment is set aside and a new trial is granted.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.