182 Mass. 351 | Mass. | 1903
The petitioners are the owners of twenty-two thousand three hundred square feet of land with a wharf and a dock and buildings upon it, abutting about seventy-five feet on Lehigh Street, which originally extended from South Street to Albany Street in Boston. Previously to the change in the street to which this petition relates, the easterly portion of Lehigh Street had been discontinued under the provisions of the St. 1896, c. 516, which provided for the construction of the terminal railway station in Boston. This discontinuance extended nearly to the easterly boundary line of the petitioners’ premises, and left the street with a length of only about two hundred and thirty feet between that point and Albany Street. Under the authority of this statute the Boston and Providence Railroad corporation filed a location for the extension of its railroad from Dartmouth Street to the terminal company’s ground, and this location made necessary a change of, grade of Albany Street, and also of Lehigh Street for a distance of about one hundred and thirty-two feet from Albany Street, to a point about twenty-five feet from the westerly line of the petitioners’ premises. This change was made and the location of the railroad was filed in accordance with an order of the board of aider-men, and this petition is brought to recover damages to the petitioners’ property from the change of grade in the street. This property is left in a cul-de-sac, with the only access to it through Albany Street and for a distance of one hundred and sixty feet over Lehigh Street. The auditor passed upon two questions: First, “ Whether in the case of property not abutting on the changed grade, damages for a special and peculiar injury can be recovered ” ; secondly, “ Whether in the present case the injury to the petitioners’ property is of such special and peculiar nature as to entitle them to damages.”
The first of these questions he rightly answered in the affirmative. The statute provides that the railroad company “ shall pay all damages occasioned by laying out, making, and maintaining its road, or by taking land or materials therefor.” Pub. Sts. c. 112, § 95. See also Pub. Sts. c. 49, § 16; Marsden v. Cambridge, 114 Mass. 490; Dana v. Boston, 170 Mass. 593; Sheldon v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 172 Mass. 180. So far as the permanent effect upon the property is concerned, the au
Another part of the proposed evidence presents a different question. The petitioners offered to prove that in making the change, Lehigh Street, bétween their property and Albany Street, “ was completely closed up and access to and egress from the property of the petitioners for teaming purposes was rendered impossible from April 21,1899, to August 21, 1899,” and that the petitioners thereby suffered great damage from their inability to use their property for the purposes to which it was adapted. Although this kind of question has sometimes been referred to, there is no adjudication covering it in this Commonwealth. For four months the street was practically although not technically discontinued so far as travel by teams
The cases of Harvard College v. Stearns, 15 Gray, 1, and Blackwell v. Old Colony Railroad, 122 Mass. 1, differ so much from the present case in their facts that they are not controlling in favor of the respondents. If the petitioners had been deprived of access to their property with teams permanently, as they were for four months, we should have no hesitation in holding that their damages were special and peculiar, and that they could recover them under this petition. Does it make any difference in principle that the interference with the use of their property was only temporary ? We are of opinion that it does not, and so it has been decided. Penney v. Commonwealth, 173 Mass. 507.
New trial ordered.