delivered the opinion of the court:
The appellee, the Otis Elevator Company, brought this action on the case in the circuit court of Cook county against the appellant, the city of Chicago, to recover damages to the property of the appellee in the city of Chicago caused by the elevation of the road-bed and tracks of the Chicago Terminal Transfer Railroad Company (now known as the Baltimore and Ohio Chicago Terminal Railroad Company) in pursuance of an ordinance of the city requiring such elevation. The appellant demurred to the amended declaration, and the demurrer being overruled it stood by the demurrer, and a default and interlocutory judgment were entered against it, in favor of the appellee, for the amount of the damages to be ascertained. The damages were assessed by a jury at $22,500. Motions were thereupon made to set aside the verdict and in arrest of judgment, both of which were overruled and final judgment was entered in favor of the appelleе for the amount of the verdict and costs. The determination of the question raised by the demurrer involved the construction of the constitution as to whether the appellant was liable for consequential damages of the character suffered by the appellee on account of the elevation of the railroad near its property, therefore an appeal to this court was allowed.
The material facts admitted by the demurrer are as follows: On July 7, 1902, the Chicago Terminal Transfеr Railroad Company owned and operated railroad tracks running east and west upon its right of way in the city of Chicago. North of the right of way and property of the ■ railroad company, and adjoining it, there Avas a public alley 16 feet wide. Laflin street extended north from the right of way, and the plaintiff was in possession of two pieces of real estate lying on opposite sides of Laflin street and adjoining the alley on the north. The real estate of the plaintiff west of Laflin street had a frontagе of 125 feet on that street and 385 feet on the alley and was improved with a brick building used for a foundry and manufacturing heavy machinery. The tract on the east side of Laflin street had a frontage of 125 feet on the street and 360 feet on the alley and was improved with a brick building used for foundry purposes. The railroad company’s right of way and the premises of the plaintiff were at or near the same level, and the buildings were constructed with reference to the existing grade of the railroad and were used to carry on an extensive business of shipping by rail. The railroad company, under a permit issued by the commissioner of public works of the city of Chicago, had constructed and maintained a switch track .connecting with the railroad west of Laflin street, crossing the alley and entering the premises of the plaintiff about 75 feet, west of the street, extending from thence across Laflin street, in an easterly direction, into the building east of Laflin street, running through the building and- connecting with the railroad tracks at the east end of the plaintiff’s property. The switch was constructed for use in connection with the business of the plaintiff, for the purpose of receiving and shipping property by rail. At the date above mentioned an ordinance was passed by the defendant requiring the Chicago Terminal Transfer Railroad Company and other railroad companies to elevate their tracks, and on April 7, 1909, in pursuance of that ordinance and amendatory ordinances, said railroad company proceeded to еlevate the road-bed and tracks, and constructed an embankment of stone, gravel and other materials permanently and of the heighth of 20 feet, cutting off the switch connection and the possibility of further switch connection on a level with the plaintiff’s premises, as it had previously existed. The ordinance provided for acceptances by the railroad companies, and also provided that they should not be required to assume or pay any damages to adjacent property сaused by the passage and enforcement of the ordinance, and the defendant agreed that all such damages, if there were any, should be paid by it. The Chicago Terminal Transfer Railroad Company accepted the ordinance and elevated its road-bed and tracks under the agreement contained in it. As a consequence of the elevation the property of the plaintiff was depreciated in its fair cash market value. Since the elevation of the tracks the alley has been vacated by an ordinance passed on June 13, 1910.
The property of the plaintiff was separated from the right of way of the railroad company by the alley and there was no direct physical invasion of the premises, but the market value of the premises was depreciated by cutting off the switch track connection and depriving the plaintiff of the benefits to its property accruing from such connection. The right to recover the amount of the depreciation in the marked value of the premises resulting from the disconnection of the switch track is claimed under section 13 of article 2 of the constitution, which reads: “Private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation.” That provision of the constitution was construed, and a rule was established which has since been adhered to, in the case of Rigney v. City of Chicago,
In the case of South Park Comrs. v. Ayer,
Again, in Chicago аnd Western Indiana Railroad Co. v. Heidenreich,
In City of Chicago v. Walker,
In two of the above cases the question was the market valué of the property taken in view of its adaptability to certain uses, and in the other the question was the right to compensation for interference with and destruction of vested property rights. Neither of them gives any countenance to an argument that the decision in the Rigney case has been affected in any .way. In this case the defendant, for the purpose of securing the elevation of railroad tracks in the interest of the public safety and convenience, agreed with the railroad companies to assume and pay such damages as the railroad companies might become liable for by reason of such elevation. The purpose of the agreement was not to protect property owners and secure to them their damages, but to determine, as bеtween the city and the railroad company elevating its tracks, who should pay the damages recoverable by law occasioned by the act and to relieve the railroad company from their payment. (Chicago Flour Co. v. City of Chicago,
By the rules of the common law railroad companies could not be compelled to permit individuals to connect side-tracks with their railroad tracks. (People v. Chicago and Northwestern Railway Co.
In a condemnation proceeding the law permits the petitioner to exhibit its plans for the construction of the improvement, and the damages are assessed on the basis that the plans will be carried out, and only such damage will accrue to adjoining lands as will result from the construction of the improvement according to the plans. If, after such an assessment, there is a chаnge affecting the adjoining lands more unfavorably and depreciating their market value, there is a right of action for the increased damage and the measure is the additional injury caused by the alteration. (Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railway Co. v. McDougall,
There is a suggestion of an equitable estoppel of the defendant to change' the grade of the railroad. The doctrine of equitable estoppel will be applied to a city if justice and right require, as in a case where the assertion of a public right will encourage or permit a fraud; but the declaration here does not allege that the defendant did anything which would operate to give the plaintiff the right to maintain a switch under any doctrine of equitable estoppel. There is not even an allegation that the original grade of the railroad was established by the city. In the exercise of the police power the city had a right, within reasonable limits, to require the railroad company to elevate its tracks so as . to avoid grade crossings upon streets and protect the lives and property of its citizens. (Chicago and Northwestern Railway Co. v. City of Chicago,
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause is remanded to that court, with directions to sustain the demurrer.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.
