81 P. 1118 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1905
The court sustained defendant's demurrer to the amended complaint, and thereupon judgment was entered for defendant. Plaintiff prosecutes this appeal from the judgment, and contends that the demurrer was improperly sustained.
The complaint alleges that plaintiff is the owner of a lot sixty feet in depth fronting forty-two feet on the southerly line of Union Street, between Hyde and Larkin streets, in the city of San Francisco; that the franchise of defendant required it to construct and operate its cable railway as nearly as possible in the center of the street, but that, in violation of its franchise, it forcibly intruded upon said street and the southerly half thereof, and constructed its tracks and subways so that the southerly track and subway was constructed, and ever since has been maintained and operated, within four feet and two inches of the southerly sidewalk of said street in said block, and about eight feet southerly of the line where it would be if constructed as required by its franchise; that the maintenance of said track as aforesaid has for two years next preceding the commencement of the action "and does still deprive plaintiff and her tenants of the use of the southerly half of said street, obstructed the use of the sidewalk in front of plaintiff's said property, obstructed ingress and egress to and from said property, endangered the lives and limbs of the plaintiff, her family, tenants, and the public at large, and has during all said time been and is still a public nuisance and a private nuisance to the plaintiff, has depreciated the rental value of plaintiff's said property to the *231 plaintiff's damage in the sum of seven thousand eight hundred dollars."
Judgment is prayed that the defendant's tracks in said block be adjudged to be a public nuisance, and a private nuisance to plaintiff, and that they be abated, and the defendant enjoined from maintaining its tracks and operating its cars thereon, and for damages in the sum of seven thousand eight hundred dollars.
The theory of the plaintiff is, that the obstructions placed upon the public street by the defendant constitute a public nuisance, and that such nuisance is specially injurious to her. Anything which unlawfully obstructs the free passage or use in the customary manner of any public street or highway is a nuisance. (Civ. Code, sec.
The well-recognized rule in this state is, that in order for a private person to maintain his action for the abatement of a public nuisance he must allege and prove that the injury to him is not only greater in degree but different in kind from that suffered by the public at large. Any obstruction placed on a public street or highway would probably not affect any two individuals of that uncertain quantity known as the public in exactly the same degree. The person who had occasion to use the street every day would, of course, suffer more injury than one who only used it occasionally.
We cannot find from the language of the complaint in this ease that the plaintiff has suffered any injury different inkind from that suffered by every person who has had occasion to pass on the public street. The first statement is, that the obstruction deprives plaintiff and her tenants of the use of the southerly half of the said street. This, if so, is equally true as to all other persons who have had occasion to use the southerly half of said street. The next statement is, that the operation of the track obstructs the use of the sidewalk in front of plaintiff's property. It is not clear how the track *232 and the operation of the cars upon it, more than four feet from the sidewalk, could obstruct the use of the sidewalk; but if this is true the same would be equally true as to every other person whose property is similarly situated and as to every person desiring to use this sidewalk.
Then follows the statement that the operation of the cars and the maintenance of the track "has obstructed ingress and egress to and from said property, endangered the lives and limbs of the plaintiff, her family, tenants, and the public at large."
The obstruction of ingress and egress to and from the plaintiff's property is not different in kind from that suffered by every other owner of property along the street in the vicinity of the alleged obstruction. The use of the street by any one, whether by operating cars upon, or driving teams over, or passing on foot along the street would obstruct ingress and egress to and from the property situated upon the street; and the same is true as to endangering the lives and limbs of plaintiff and her tenants. The lives and limbs of all persons who have occasion to use the sidewalk or street are more or less endangered by the use of the street for all other purposes, whether by driving teams over it, riding on horseback, or operating cars upon it. There is no allegation that the obstruction prevents the plaintiff from having access to and from her property, nor is it alleged that the track of defendant is above or below the surface of the street, nor that the cars stand upon it in front of plaintiff's property. We must therefore presume that the tracks are the ordinary car-tracks of a street railway, and that the cars pass over and along the track four feet and two inches from the line of the sidewalk in front of plaintiff's property at intervals, and that during the greater part of the time there are no cars passing in front of plaintiff's lot. Such obstruction clearly would not prevent the plaintiff from getting on or off her lot to the public street.
In Aram v. Schallenberger,
In Jarvis v. Santa Clara Valley R. R. Co.,
In Bigley v. Nunan,
In Hogan v. Central Pacific R. R. Co.,
(See, further, San Jose Ranch Co. v. Brooks,
The cases of Fisher v. Zumwalt,
In San Francisco Sav. Union v. R. G. R. Petroleum etc. Co.,
We know of no case, and none has been cited, where it has been held that an obstruction to a public highway may be abated by a suit at the instance of a private party, where the damage is not different in kind from that suffered by the public at large.
Plaintiff earnestly contends that the cases ofKishlar v. Southern Pacific R. R. Co.,
It has long been settled that under our present constitution an abutting owner may maintain an action to recover the damage which he suffers through the occupation of a street by a railway company. (Eachus v. Los Angeles etc. Ry. Co.,
The nuisance may have depreciated the rental value of plaintiff's property, and yet not have damaged the plaintiff. In an action for damages the plaintiff must show that he has sustained some injury for which he can recover damages, and the object of the action must be the recovery of such damages. We cannot, under the most liberal rules, hold that this is an action for compensation for "taking or damaging private property."
The judgment is affirmed.
Hall, J., and Harrison, P. J., concurred. *236