The grant of the right to build and operate the bridge is clear and certain ; and this grant carried with it all the incidental rights and powers which were requisite to the efficacious and beneficial exercise and enjoyment of the right. And among these there must, of course, be included the right to construct necessary and suitable
II. The next question in natural order arising is, whether the city council of the city of Des Moines was itself possessed of authority to grant such rights to the defendant. - And this, under our previous decisions, does not admit of any doubt. Milburn v. The City of Cedar Rapids, et al.,
III. And, finally, is the defendant liable for the consequential damages resulting to plaintiff by the construction of its road, bridge and approaches in the manner it has done, which, as we have seen, was authorized by law and ordinance of the city ? For it will be remembered, the defendant avers in the answer demurred to that the bridge was properly located and constructed at the lowest practicable altitude ; that the embankment constituted the approach to the bridge, and the same was necessary and indispensable to the operation of the bridge, and was constructed in good faith and without negligence.
The supreme court of Pennsylvania, in an opinion prepared by Thompson, Ch. J., and announced last month, in the case of Woodward & Vincent v. Wells, (Legal Gazette, vol. 2, No. 23, June 10, 1870,) laid down this doctrine : “Consequential damages are never recoverable
We have examined the cases cited by the appellee’s counsel in support of their view, which is in antagonism to the general proposition we have just above stated, and also other cases. But those cases do not conflict with our general rule. The case of State v. The Ohio and Miss. R. R. Co.,
In Brown v. The C. & S. R. R. Co.,
The following cases will be found to support the conclusion in this. Mason v. M. & P. R. R. Co.,
The city of Des Moines had the authority to change the grade of the street in front of plaintiff’s property, and that, too, without liability to plaintiff for any injury resulting to her property therefrom. This point has been frequently decided by this court, and is in accord with the current authorities. See Creal v. The City of Keokuk,
Eeversed.
