*564 OPINION
By the Court,
This case is the sequel to City of Reno v. District Court,
The dispositive appellate question is whether an abutting property owner possesses a right to compensation for interference with his claimed implied negative easement of light, air and view by an overpass placed on a street in circumstances where none of the оwner’s real property is taken. Nevada has not ruled on this question. We now declare that a right to compensation does not exist in these circumstances and affirm the judgment entered below.
1. For eminent domain purposes there is a difference in treatment between positive easements such as rights of passage and use, restrictive covenants, and the implied negative easements of light, air and view.
1
The extinguishment of a positive easement by public acquisition gives rise to compensation. The leading case, United States v. Welch,
2. As we see it, the fallacy of this argument is the undеrlying assumption that there exists in Nevada the doctrine of implied negative easements. As heretofore noted, the easement for which compensation is claimed in this case is the implied easеment of light, air and view. We are not here concerned with a negative easement of light, air and view created by express covenant. Nevada has expressly repudiated the doctrine of imрlied negative easement of light, air and view for the purpose of a private suit by one landowner against a neighbor. Boyd v. McDonald,
Not every depreciation in the value of property not taken can be madе the basis of an award of damages. There is no right to compensation for damages resulting from reаsonable zoning regulations, or by reason of the diversion of traffic away from one’s property. Rose v. State of California,
Affirmed.
Notes
A positive еasement indicates the affirmative use of land. A negative easement connotes the powеr to restrict another’s use of land. 5 Rest. Prop. §§ 451-52 (1944); 2 American Law of Property §§ 8.11-12 (Casner ed. 1952).
The case of Teacher Bldg. Co. v. Las Vegas,
