103 Mass. 1 | Mass. | 1869
One question raised at the trial, though not argued here, was, that no damages could be given on account of the obstruction to the road leading from the highway across the land >of the petitioner, because no application had been made therefor within one year. Gen. Sts. c. 63, § 28. But a road across one’s own land is not a “private way” within the meaning'of'that statute. The ruling of the sheriff upon this point was- correct..
The.ruling was correct, also, as to the right of the petitioner
The owner of the land is entitled to “ all damages occasioned by laying out and making and maintaining its road,” as well as by taking his land. Gen. Sts. c. 63, § 21. This includes all injury to the remaining land, by cutting off access to or egress from different parts of it, whether by roads actually in use or otherwise; or rendering it inconvenient by breaking it up into irregular pieces; or in any manner lessening its suitableness for occupation as a whole, or for division into lots. If, by constructing a new way by the side of the railroad, the remaining land would be equally well accommodated as by the former one, and equally suited for occupation as a whole, or for division into lots, then the cost of constructing such new way, and the value of the land required therefor beyond that previously used as a way and taken and paid for as land by the railroad corporation would be a proper measure of damages, so far as the mere obstruction of the way is concerned.
The corporation requested that the cost of making a new way, including the value of the land required therefor, “and the de
The jury were also instructed to assess separately the damages claimed “for the depreciation of the remaining land on Weir Street and Presbrey Street, by reason of the proximity of the railroad, such as for frightening horses, and the like causes.” The damages assessed upon this ground we think are not properly recoverable. Such depreciation is not occasioned directly by any effect upon the land, of which the construction or the maintenance of the railroad is the cause. It belongs to that class of results which necessarily arise from the exercise of the franchise granted to such corporations in consideration of the general advantage which the whole community are expected to derive from it. The annoyances to the landowner are the same in kind with those which are suffered by the whole community The fact that land, lying upon or near the location of the railroad, is thereby rendered less desirable for the erection of dwellings or other buildings, and of less market value in consequence, does not furnish an independent ground for the recovery of damages therefor. Eames v. New England Worsted Co. 11 Met. 570. Fuller v. Chicopee Manufacturing Co. 16 Gray, 46. The effect upon land of the annoyance or inconvenience arising from the laying of the track, and the frequent passing of trains over a street by which it is approached, has been frequently held to afford no ground for damages. Proprietors of Locks & Canals v. Nashua & Lowell Railroad Co. 10 Cush. 385. Boston & Worcester Railroad Co. v. Old Colony Railroad Co. 12 Cush. 606. Caledonian Railway Co. v. Ogilvy, 2 Macq. 229; 29 Eng. Law & Eq. 22.
The principle of these decisions may not apply when the construction or the use of the railroad is such as to cause an actual obstruction to the occupation of land, or interruption of
When, however, part of a tract or lot of land is taken, the damages therefor may be more or less affected by the nature of the uses for which it is taken, and the kind and character of structures liable to be placed upon it. The basis of the estimate is not strictly the value of the land taken, with added damages for such direct injuries as may be occasioned to the remaining land. It is compensation for all damages to the whole tract, occasioned by taking a part of it for the uses and in the manner in which it is taken by the location. The inconveniences and annoyances inseparable from such uses must inevitably, and may properly, affect the estimate of damages occasioned by such appropriation of a part of the land; but they do so incidentally, and not as in themselves a ground of damage. The degree of such incidental effect will depend much upon the situation of the land, the uses to which it is appropriated, and the manner in which it is cut by the line of location. If the whole is vacant land, and the part taken is a narrow strip from one side, any claim of damages, beyond the value of the land taken, would ordinarily stand upon the same footing with a like claim where the location is outside but adjoining the boundary line of the claimant’s land. Such claim, as has already been said, can be sustained only for injuries to the land itself, and for disturbance of its means of access or of convenient occupation.
By direction of the sheriff, the jury have returned separately the interest on each of the sums assessed by them as damages upon, the several grounds of damage submitted to them. No
The facts stated in the report, in regard to the “ Willis estate,’ show that the sum paid by the respondent for the land taken and damages occasioned to that estate, was improperly admitted in evidence. Upon the question of the value of land which is the subject of controversy, actual sales of other land in the vicinity, similarly situated, may be shown, and the price paid
As a sale of land, the transaction in regard to the v Willis estate” did not furnish such a comparison as would erable a jury properly to arrive at the value of the vacant land oí the petitioner. That payment was for a strip of land across a house lot, near the dwelling-house, and including a well; and the location involved a high embankment upon the stri( so taken. The position of such a strip of land, and its relations to the dwelling-house, would inevitably and reasonably affect the price to be placed upon it, so far as to make it an unsuitable measure for the value, of other lands not so connected.
But further than that; the price paid for lands purchased for the location of a railroad, designated by lines run according ■‘•a the exigencies of that location, and without reference to the convenience of the landowner, is generally affected by a consideration of the disadvantage to the whole tract resulting from th», manner in which the location is made. It includes all incidental injuries to the remaining land. It is in effect a settlement of all damages which would otherwise be recoverable by the proceed ings provided for that purpose. Where the transaction is free from such considerations, so that it may fairly be regarded like an ordinary sale, between seller and purchaser, the evidence would be competent in the assessment of damages for other lands, to show the value of the land; and none the less so because the purchaser was a railroad corporation and the respond ent in the proceedings. Wyman v. Lexington & West Cam
In this case, the report shows that the sum paid by the respondent to the “ Willis estate ” was paid “ as a gross sum, not only for the land taken, but also for damages to the entire estate.” It also shows that the circumstances and the situation of the estate were such that the damages must have formed an important element in estimating the amount to be paid therefor. This, in our opinion, rendered it incompetent as evidence of the value of the adjoining vacant land.
For these reasons, the verdict was properly set aside wholly in the superior court. Exceptions overruled.