Ordinarily where a trespass results in a nuisance, not only is the original wrong actionable, but successive suits may be brought for its continuance, in each of which the damages, if apportionable, can be estimated only up to the time when it was brought in some of the states, but in this State up to the time of trial. 5 Am. & Eng. Enc., 17; Blount v. McCormick, 3 Deues, 283; Bare v. Hoffman, 79 Penn. St., 71; Russell v. Brown, 63 Maine, 203.
In ordinary transactions between individuals where the *998 trespass consists in the erection of temporary structures that piove to be nuisances, the law presumes that tort-feasor will desist from keeping it up, after being oncе mulcted in damages; but, where he persists in the wrong, permits continued actions to*be maintained against him, as an inducement to its removal. - v. Reed, 18 C. B., 658; Bare v. Hoffman, supra; 5 Am. & Eng. Enc., page 17, and note 1.
Where the building of a railroad is authorized by law and is done with reasonable care and skill, it is not a uui-sanee and the company is not answerable, after paying the sum assessed, or agreed upon by the owner, for taking the land occupied for the public use, in any additional damage resulting from the, original construction.
Adams
v.
Railroad,
But even where the injury complained of, either by the servient owner or an adjacent proprietor, is due to the negligent construction of such public works as railways which it is the policy of the law to encourage, if the injury is permanent and affects the value of the estate, a recovery may be had at law of the entire damages in one action.
Smith
v.
Railroad,
The right to recover prospective as well as existing damages in an action dеpends usually upon the answer to the test question, whether the whole injury results from the original tortious act or “from the wrongful continuance-of the state of facts produced by these acts.” The town of
Troy
v.
Cheshire R. Co., supra.
In this case, which has
*999
been cited as authority by text writers and many of the courts of the states, the action was brought for damages for the occupation of a street and town bridge by a railway company and it was conceded that in the sense that the highway was obstructed the company had created a nuisance. The Court said, “ The railroad is in its nature and design and nse a permanent structure which cannot be assumed to be liable to change; the appropriation of the roadway and materials to the use of the railroad is therefore a permanent appropriation. The use of the land set apart to be used as a highway by the railroad company for its tracks is
& permanent diversion
of the property tо that new use, and a permanent dispossession of the town of it, as the .place on which to maintain the highway. The injury done to the town is then a permanent injury, at once done by the construction of the railroad which is
dependent upon no contingency of which the law can take
notice, and for the injury thus done to them they are entitled to recover at once their reasonable damages.” “Injuries caused by permanent structures infringing upon the plaintiff’s rights in his land, such as railroad embankments, culverts, bridges, permanеnt dams and permanent pollutions of water,” says Gould, in his Work on Waters, Section 1-16, fall within the class where “the plaintiff is required to recover his entire damage present and prospective.”
Ibid.,
Sec. 582;
Duncan
v.
Syl
vester,
Whеre a railroad company, duly authorized by law to construct a railway, built an embankment partly on the bed of a river, and thereby .changed the current of the stream from its proper course and caused it to wash away adjacent land, it was held by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in
Fowle
v. Railroad,
In England, where the Act of Parliament authorizes-the bringing of an action, in such casos as that before us, by a land owner who can show any special injury done to-his land by the construction of the road, it was held that-a proprietor, whose premises abutted on a highway fifty- *1003 feet wide, could recover only permaneut damаges for injury to bis land caused by the building of an embankment by a railway covering 20 feet of the highway in his front. Beckett v. Railroad, 3 Com. Pleas, (L. R., 1887-8) 81. In Jeffersonville, &c., R. Co., supra, the Supreme Court of Kentucky rested the ruling in part upon the proposition that an abutting owner upon a street dedicated to the use of the public, having no possession or right of possession in such highway, could not at common-law have maintained an action for trespass guare clausum fregit, but must have brought an action on the case. "Where the easement of suсh abutting owner was interfered with by the construction of a railroad, the Court held that he could recover a sum representing the diminution in value of his land or lot by the location and use of the railway track in his front. In Cadle v. Railroad Co., supra, which was more nearly in point, the Court held that where an injury to land was due to the unskillful construction of a railroad, the measure of damage was the difference between the value of his property with the road as constructed, and its estimated vаlue with the line properly constructed.
In
North Vernon
v.
Voegler,
The Legislature may empower a steam railway company, which already hаs the license of a City to occupy a public street with its track, to take in the exercise of the right of eminent domain whatever interest abuttiug proprietors have therein, or to make compensation for whatever injury they may sustain, as holders of rights or easements in the street, by reason of the construction and operating of the road. It has been decided in
White
v. Railroad,
supra,
that where no such steps had been taken, but the streets were occupiеd under a license from the municipality, the abutting owner might elect to waive the want of authority to condemn, and to demand damages present and prospective, or to ask compensation only up to the time of trial. In some of the states and it seems in England, where suit is brought for an injury to land in the nature of a private nuisance created by an individual, the judgment in the first suit of this nature may be pleaded in bar of recovery in any subsequent action for the same nuis-
*1007
anee. The Court of Illinois drew a very nice distinction in such actions between cases where the nuisance is alleged as the cause of action, and where it is brought for diminution in the value of the land by reason of the nuisance. In that case
(Illinois Central Co.
v.
Grovill,
Upon a careful consideration of the authorities already cited and those that will be added, and the reasons on which they rest, we deduce the following principles as decisive of the questions involved in this appeal :
1. A railway company that has constructed its road under lawful authority creates neither аn abatable public nuisance nor a continuing private nuisance by failing to leave sufficient space between embankments, or by means of culverts for the passage of the water of running streams, in case of any rise in the streams that might reasonably be expected, and the injury due to that cause may be compensated for by the assessment of present and prospective damages in a single action.
2. It is the legal right of the plaintiff оr defendant to elect to have permanent damages assessed in such an action upon demand made in the pleadings, and when either makes the demand the judgment may be pleaded in bar of any subsequent action. The defendant is required to set up this or any other equity, upon which he relies, as well as to prove that averment on the trial. But where a plaintiff is allowed without objection to have such damage apportioned, the judgment is not a bar, and either party to a subsequent suit involving the same question may demand that both present and prospective damages be assessed, and upon proof of a previous partial assessment the jury may consider that fact in diminution of the permanent damage.
3. The measure of damage is the difference in the value *1010 of the plaintiff’s land with the railway constructed as it is, and what would have been its value, had the road been skillfully constructed. Cadle v. Railroad, supra.
4. The Statute of Limitations begins to run in such cases, not necessarily from the construction of the road, but from the time when the first injury was sustained. Van Orsdol's case supra, at p. 473.
Having set up in its answer that the damage was permanent and excepted on the trial to the refusal of the court to submit an issue involving that question, the defendant is entitled to a new trial.
It-is not necessary to pass upon all other questions discussed. Indeed, we did not understand counsel to seriously insist that the suit for damage done in Virginia could be pleaded in bar here, or that any injury done to land in another state could be considered in this action.
New Trial.
