Defendants own an apartment house on the corner of Tehama and Liberty Streets in Redding, California. They also owned the fee underlying a portion of Tehama Street and entirely occupied thereby. This parcel adjoints the lot on which the apartment house is locatеd.
In this condemnation proceeding the state, as part of a freeway project, condemned the fee of the parcel underlying Tehama Street along which the freeway will run and also condemned the access rights of defendants to Tehama Street. The proceeding was tried to the court.
The sole question raised on appeal is whether the trial court erred when in fixing damages for the eondemnees’ loss of access and similar rights it refused to include any amount for (1) the increased noise, fumes and annoyance which would result from the more heavily trafficked freeway, and (2) for loss of street parking privileges on Tehama Street previously enjoyed. 1 (Defendants ’ parking privileges on Liberty Street will be unaffected by the street improvement.) Our holding is that neither of the matters referred to is a property interest and thаt, therefore, the losses claimed are not compensable, and we will affirm the judgment.
The particular portion of the field of the law of eminent domain with which we deal is access rights and the right to light, air and view of an abutting owner. California Constitution, article I, section 14, in part, says: “Private property *312 shall not be taken or damaged 2 for public use without just compensation.” This article, self-executing, is bulwarked by-title 7 of part 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure, included within which is section 1248, providing in effect that the trier of fact must ascertain and assess the value of the property sought to be condеmned and if that property constitutes only a part of a larger parcel, the damages suffered by the severance of the part not taken from the part taken.
“Not every depreciation in the value of the property not taken can be made the basis of an award of damages” in eminent domain.
(People
v.
Ricciardi,
The right of access and the similar right of light, air and view which we have mentioned above are property rights. They are easements which a property owner abutting a street enjoys in addition to the rights which the public in general has to use the streets. These abutting owners’ rights include right of ingress and egress to and from the streets by such modes of conveyance and travel as are appropriate to the highway, exercised in such manner as is reasonable. (See
Rose
v.
State of California, supra,
at p. 728;
Bacich
v.
Board of Control, supra; People
v.
Ricciardi, supra; People
v.
Russell,
Determination of the problem under the facts of any ease as to whether an access right has, or has not, been invaded is one of law for the court.
(Rose
v.
State of California, supra,
In determining the extent of the abutting owner’s right or easement of access, the problem of definition is difficult and in the nature of the matter
specificity
of definition is imрossible. It is not very helpful to state that each ease must be determined upon its own facts but that is as close to abstract definition as the problem permits. (See, e.g.,
People
v.
Russell,
Definition of the opposite extremes is easy. On the one hand, courts will not award compensation for every inconsequential inconvenience, discomfort and displeasure suffered by the abutting owner as the result of the building of each new public improvement. To so hold would make the cost of public improvements prohibitive. At the other extreme, whenever the courts have found a public improvement substantially interfering with the access of the abutting owner to the street, a property right has been said to exist which has been invaded and compensation based upon the diminution in value of the right interfered with has been awarded.
Between these extremes, our reading of the cases does show discussion of policy factors which are helpful. As stated above, interference to be compensable must be “substantial” and the right urged must be “reasonable.”
(Breidert
v.
Southern Pac. Co., supra,
In the determination of whether or not in any given case the claimed interference rises to the status of the invasion of a right there is necessarily involved a weighing of the question as to whether an exercise of the state’s police power has been overlapped by its exercise of the power of eminent dоmain. (See Freeways and the Rights of Abutting Owners, 3 Stan. L. Rev., pp. 298, 302.)
The majority opinion in
Bacich
(on p. 351) quotes from Sedgwick on Constitutional Law: “ ‘The tendency under our system is too often to sacrifice the individual to the community. . . .’ ” We imply no criticism of that statement (see
Beckley
v.
Reclamation Board,
Re: The Contention that Defendants had a Street Parking Bight, the Destruction of whiсh Entitles them to Compensation.
The cases cited and quoted from above have been principally concerned with cul-de-sacs, circuity of travel, restrictions of view caused by clover-leafs, underpasses and similar incidents of highway construction. Precedent brings us closеr to the questions raised in the case at bench. In
People
v.
Ayon,
Defendants’ argument is that in erecting their apartment house they provided no off street parking, relying upon the City of Redding’s policy to permit unlimited curb parking on both Tehama and Liberty Streets and there had never been any suggestion that that condition would ever be changed. This, it is argued, had by lapse of time become the basis of a substantial part оf a right of access which the building of this freeway destroyed.
No specific authority is cited for this proposition.
The respondent’s counterargument is that there is, and can be, no proprietory right in an abutting landowner to park automobiles on a street. Under the authorities and principles stated above we find this argument sound. Vehicle Cоde sections 22506 and 22507 expressly authorize local authorities to prohibit or restrict the parking of vehicles on state highways and upon streets “during all or certain hours of the day.” Parking meters have been held to be a proper adjunct to traffic control.
(Mervynne
v.
Acker,
Obviously, so far as the gеneral public is concerned, all of these measures are a legitimate exercise of the state’s regulatory police power. To hold otherwise would be to place a staggering and unjustifiable burden upon the cost of government and public improvement and, more important, seriously impair the public safety. (See Freeways and the Rights of Abutting Owners, 3 Stan. L. Rev., pp. 298, 303.) The parking privilege which defendants enjoyed was permissive and existed only at sufferance by the city. Continuance over the years created no prescriptive right. Even as a permissive privilege it was оnly one which defendants enjoyed as members of the public. No proprietory right to park existed and therefore none was severed when the state took over the city street and created a freeway.
*316
The only case which we have been able to find suggesting a cоntrary rule is
Lane
v.
San Diego Elec. Ry. Co.,
No Califоrnia case has been called to our attention in which the question of the right to an award of damages for the loss or infringement of a parking privilege has been presented. 3
While no California case in point has been called to our attention, the point has been rаised and settled in another jurisdiction. In
State
v.
Williams
(1964)
We so hold here.
Be: The Contention that Defendants are Entitled to Compensation for an Increase in Noise, Fumes and Annoyances which Increased Traffic on the Freeway will Produce.
In making their claim under the caption above, defendants argue that their right to be free from the increase of noise, fumes аnd annoyances which the presence of the freeway will entail is a part of their abutting land owners’
*317
right o£ light, air and view. Cited generally is
People
v.
Ricciardi,
We have express precedent in California oрposing defendants’ contention. In
City of Berkeley
v.
Von Adelung, supra
(1963)
City of Hayward
v.
Unger,
The judgment is affirmed.
Regan, J., and Warne, J. pro tem., * concurred.
Notes
The trial court found that the value of the apartment house property would be diminished by the loss of parking privileges and by the increased traffic noises, fumes and annoyances but held they were noneompensable. The court also fixed thе amounts which should be assessed were it determined on appeal that a legal damage had been suffered.
The words “or damaged” were not included in the Constitution of 1849. They were added by the Constitution of 1879. It has been said that this was an intent by the people of the state to “liberalizе the policy of compensation in the area of consequential injury, as distinguished from an actual appropriation.” (Concurring opinion of Justice Edmonds in
Bacich
v.
Board of Control, supra,
In
City of Berkeley
v.
Von Adelung
(1963)
Retired judge of the superior court sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
