Opinion
Thomas H. Wilson appeals from denial of severance damages in a condemnation action.
I
In 1954, the State of California (State) purchased land frоm Wilson’s parents for construction of the Santa Ana freeway. In 1991, it sought to purchase an additional parcel as part of its widening plan. The parties аgreed on a price, but Wilson maintained he was entitled to severance damages as well.
The matter proceeded to trial, Wilson argued the erection of a 14-foot sound wall on property bordering the freeway and extending 100 feet onto the recently acquired property would block northbound travelers’ views of his business. The State maintained the 1954 deed relinquished Wilson’s rights to severance damages and, in any event, no right of view existed. The trial court agreed with the State, finding “the Wilsons and the condemnee had previously quitclaimed all abutter’s rights in an earlier taking, and . . . this taking ... did not revive any abutter’s rights. B] • • • [A]nd even if that weren’t the case ... as a second basis for the ruling . . . the property had no rights to a view from the freeway.” Because no extrinsic evidence is
*980
involved, we exercise our indеpendent judgment in interpreting the written instrument.
(Bos Material Handling, Inc.
v.
Crown Controls Corp.
(1982)
II
A property owner’s abutter’s rights include the rights of view, access, light and air.
(Williams
v.
Los Angeles Ry. Co.
(1907)
The 1954 deed provided: “This conveyance is made for the purposes of a freeway and the grantоr hereby releases and relinquishes to the grantee any and all abutter’s rights, including access rights, appurtenant to grantor’s remaining property, in and to said freeway.” Did Wilson’s relinquishment of “any and ¿II abutter’s rights” include the right to a view of his property?
Ten years prior to the conveyance of the deed, the court in
People
v.
Ricciardi
(1943)
Deeds are to be construed like contracts.
(Schwenn
v.
Kaye
(1984)
Wilson contends, despite the deed, he is nevertheless entitled to compеnsation because the damages he sustained through loss of view were unforseeable. Under the general rule, one who grants land for public use is estopped from claiming foreseeable damages. “ ' “[W]henever a grant of a right of way is executed by a land owner he [or she] thereby estops himself [or herself] frоm afterward prosecuting any action for the past, present, or future damages that may have occurred, or
reasonably be expected to occur,
by reason of the necessary, natural, and ordinary use of the utility or public service for which the right of way is granted.” ’ ”
(Albers
v.
County of Los Angeles
(1965)
We are unconvinced. In the first place, the cases cited by Wilson do not support his claim. In none of the cases does the court use forseeability as a basis for awarding or denying severance damages in addition to the compensation the grantor received for the deed relinquishing all abutter’s rights.
Wilson’s reliance on
Mehl
v.
People
ex rel.
Dept. Pub. Works
(1975)
Wilson also relies on
Ellena
v.
State of California
(1977)
Ill
Wilson challenges the court’s alternative ground for its judgment, i.e., that regardless of the deed, the owner has no legal right to a view of his рroperty from the freeway. But the lower court was correct. A freeway is unlike a highway. An abutter/landowner has a right to a view from a public road or highway.
(People
v.
Ricciardi, supra,
The purpose of a public road or highway is to allow abutting owners access from their private roads onto the main road for travel and to allow customers traveling alоng the road or highway to view a business, drive into it, patronize it, and reenter the highway. (See
People
ex rel.
Dept. Public Works
v.
Lipari, supra,
Wilson testified, without contradiction, that prior to 1954, his property abutted a main thoroughfare or public roads. Though Wilson had a right to a view from the public road, the construction of the freeway and the relinquishment in the 1954 deed eliminated that right.
Even if Wilson’s property did
not
abut a public road, he still has no rights to a view because the freewаy did not create any abutter’s rights. If Wilson’s
*983
property did not abut anything, then he could not have abutter’s rights. Abutter’s rights could only come into existence by the construction of a road or highway. However,
Schnider
v.
State of California, supra,
The judgment is affirmed. The State is awarded its costs on appeal.
Wallin, Acting P. J., and Crosby, J., concurred.
Notes
For the same reason,
Williams
v.
Sutter-Butte Canal Co.
(1947)
We do not address Wilson’s claim that the right to a view is
inherent
in the property and is not created by the freeway. Wilson relies on
People
ex rel.
Dept. Public Works
v.
Upari, supra,
