40 A. 421 | R.I. | 1898
This case is before us on exceptions to the rulings and decisions of the Sixth District Court; and the question raised is whether the plaintiff can recover rent of premises included within the limits of land taken for a highway under the Highway Act, so-called, for the time intervening between the condemnation of said land and the time when the defendant's occupation ceased.
The record shows that the defendants attorned to the plaintiff and paid their rent to the date of the taking of the land for the highway. At the trial in the court below, the plaintiff proved its prior ownership in fee and the continued occupation by the defendants. The defendants then offered the condemnation proceedings by the city council of Providence, upon the first day for which plaintiff claims rent in this case, viz., July 1, 1895, said proceedings having been had under the first seventeen sections of Pub. Stat. R.I. cap. 64, as modified by Pub. Laws R.I. cap. 587, passed April 30, 1886, and the plaintiff objected to the introduction thereof as immaterial, *546 and excepted to the ruling of the court admitting the same in evidence. The plaintiff also excepted to the decision of the court for the defendants, based upon said highway proceedings.
Its contention, in brief, is (1) that condemnation proceedings being in invitum, statutes relating thereto must be strictly construed; (2) that, unless distinctly otherwise provided, all that the city obtains by such proceedings, under the statute in question, is that which the common law has ever regarded as sufficient for the accomplishment of the public purpose, namely, an easement over the land; and (3) that there can be no presumption that the city has paid for anything more than the statute gives it, and, accordingly, there is no equity for the defendants because of payment by the city to the plaintiff.
The defendants' contention, on the other hand, briefly stated, is that, upon the adoption of the report of the committee appointed by the board of aldermen to pay out the street, and payment by the city to the owner of the land in question, the right of the plaintiff as landlord thereupon immediately ceased, and hence that the plaintiff cannot maintain its action for rent. The principal argument in support of this contention is that the title of the city to the land condemned under the Highway Act is the same as that which it obtains in proceedings under the Betterment Act. Ordinances of the City of Providence, ed. of 1877, 301-7. We do not think this position is tenable. The Highway Act is materially different from the Betterment Act in several of its features, and particularly as bearing upon the case before us, in that it contains no statement as to the title which is obtained by virtue of the condemnation proceedings nor any provision affecting pending leases. All the right which the city obtained in the land in question was an easement therein for the purposes of a highway. And, therefore, notwithstanding "the condemnation of the land to the use of the public for travel, the title to the soil, and all the profits thereof consistent with the existence of the easement, remain in the original owner."Tucker v. Eldred,
As to the rent of the premises, then, which accrues after the condemnation of the land and before the actual eviction of the tenant, we fail to see that it can properly be distinguished from any other profit derived therefrom. Suppose, for instance, that a given layout of a highway under the Highway Act should include one's dwelling-house which he is actually occupying; could it be successfully claimed that *548 he could not rightfully continue in the occupancy and enjoyment thereof until such time as the city should see fit to take actual possession of the land for a highway? We think not. And if we are right in this view, it logically follows that the rent and income of the building, if occupied by a tenant of the owner, also belong to him.
As the city obtained only an easement in the land in question, it clearly had no right to use the same for any other purposes than those appertaining to a highway. It could not legally build upon it or rent it; and if it should do so, the owner could recover the land in ejectment, together with the rents thereof as mesne profits. Proprietors of Locks Canals
v. Railway Co.,
The case of Emmes v. Feeley,
In speaking of the compatibility of the public enjoyment with individual possession, Mr. Angell, in his work on Highways, p. 429, says: "An easement is a privilege, service, or convenience in the estate of another, by grant or prescription, and comprises no interest in the thing itself. It supposes that different rights in the use of the same thing may coexist in different persons; and nothing is more common than for one to have an easement in the land of another, who has an estate in fee and is in actual possession. It is compatible with the right of the owner of the fee to depasture and mow it, to take the trees and anything growing on it, and hold it in possession for these purposes. If disseized by the grantee of the easement, he can recover possession in ejectment, there being no inconsistency in the recovery subject to the private right of way. The principle is precisely the same in regard to the right of the public in the soil of a highway; its right is but an easement, and, subject to that, it no more conflicts with the right of the public in a highway than with that of an individual in a private way, for the owner of the fee to recover possession." *549
In Thomas v. Ford,
To the same general effect are the following cases cited by plaintiff, viz.: Heyneman v. Blake,
The defendants' counsel have cited cases in which it is held that the appropriation of leased premises for public purposes extinguishes the lease, and hence that an action for rent accruing subsequently to the condemnation cannot be maintained. The cases referred to are Biddle v. Hussman, 23 Mo. 597;Barclay v. Pickles, 38 Mo. 143; and Commissioners v.Johnson,
In the case of Barclay v. Pickles, 38 Mo. 143, however, the question was squarely raised as to the effect of condemnation proceedings upon an existing lease of the land, and the court held that upon the confirmation of the report of the commissioners condemning the property, the lease became void, and hence that the landlord could not recover rent which subsequently accrued. The same rule seems to have been adopted inCommissioners v. Johnson, supra. These cases, together with some others to the same effect, evidently proceed upon the theory that the condemnation of the land divests the owner of his title absolutely, and hence that all rights depending upon the continuance of that title are necessarily extinguished. Thus inCorrigan v. Chicago,
This is not the view taken by the courts in general, as has already been shown, and is certainly not in accordance with the well-settled doctrine in this State.
The general question under consideration is quite fully discussed by Mr. Joseph H. Taulane, in Vol. 29 of the Amer. Law Review, pp. 351-60, and the writer, while personally *551 taking the same view as that expressed in the Missouri and Illinois cases above cited, yet frankly admits that the weight of authority is against it.
Our decision is that the plaintiff is entitled to recover the rent accruing as aforesaid, and the exceptions are, therefore, sustained, and the case remitted to the Sixth District Court with direction to enter judgment for the plaintiff for the amount due.