November 28, 1903. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The South Bound Railway Company brought these separate actions against the several defendants to enjoin them from prosecuting statutory proceedings instituted to obtain compensation for depreciation of their property in the city of Columbia, resulting from the construction and operation of the plaintiff's railroad through Lincoln street. All of the lots abut on Lincoln street, except lot No. 2 of the defendants, Eliza Burton and her cotenants, which is contiguous to their lot No. 1 on that street. The Circuit Judge, upon trial of the case, dissolved the temporary injunctions, holding that all the defendants were entitled to have their damages assessed under the condemnation statute.
The act of 1786, 4 Stat., 751, under which the city of Columbia was founded, provided that the land acquired by the commissioners for that purpose should be held by them "for the use of this State;" but it directs them to lay off lots and streets of prescribed dimensions. In 1871, the legislature empowered the city council to "lay out new streets, close up, widen or otherwise alter those now in use," subject to the constitutional prohibition against taking private property without compensation, and the statutory provisions as to the method of acquiring property for street purposes and assessing damages. Under this authority, the city council, on September 26th, 1899, authorized the South Bound Railroad Company to build its road through Lincoln street.
The appellant takes the position that the State, under the act of 1786, remains the absolute owner of all streets of the city, that abutting owners can acquire no rights therein against it, and since it empowered the city council to close up or alter the streets, the authorization by the council to use Lincoln street was equivalent to direct authority to the railroad from the State. We incline to think the appellant's *Page 520
view is correct, that the rights acquired by the State in the lands upon which the city of Columbia was laid off are similar to those of the United States in the lands upon which the National Capital is built. In both instances, the streets were laid off under public authority, and commissioners directed to sell lots with reference to those streets. In such circumstances the public faith is pledged not to destroy or materially interfere with the street privilege, which it created as an inducement to purchasers. This principle was not involved in Van Ness v. Mayor, 4 Peters, 287, or PotomacSteamboat Co. v. Upper Potomac Steamboat Co.,
But whatever may be the rights of the State in this regard, it is clear that the legislature did not by the act of 1871 intend to confer on the city council the absolute power over the streets which appellant attributes to the State. Fair interpretation of the act leads to the conclusion that it only gives such control of streets as is usually exercised by such officers, and this control is subject to the constitutional burden of making compensation for the taking of private property.
It may be true that where the State by charter authorizes the construction of a railroad on a definite line, the right is implied to enter and cross the lands of the State on that line; but this implication does not extend to the destruction or impairment of private property rights which others have acquired with respect to such land in consequence of an antecedent contract with the State. It is manifest, therefore, the respondents having acquired property rights in Lincoln street by reason of the State's sale of the abutting lots to *Page 521 their grantors, with an implied contract that the purchasers should have the usual benefits and privileges of abutting owners, the State could not, though the owner of the street, authorize the taking away of such benefits and privileges without compensation.
The vital question, therefore, is whether the construction of a railroad through Lincoln street is such curtailment of the usual street privileges as entitles an owner of abutting lots to compensation for the depreciation in value of his property arising from the railroad use. It is insisted such depreciation does not amount to taking property, but only damaging it, and hence cannot form the basis of a proceeding under our Constitution and statute, which only provide compensation for taking. It is not to be doubted, as said in Transportation Co. v. Chicago,
The depreciation of value produced by building an ordinary railroad through a street presents a very different question. The operation of a railroad running to distant points is not a street purpose. It is not ordinarily used to transport either freight or passengers from one part of a city to another, and has no direct connection with a city's internal traffic or travel, which are the distinctive uses of its streets. Hence the building and operation of a railroad through a street cannot be regarded such a street use as to require the abutting land owner to submit to the total or partial destruction of the value of his property without compensation. Causing such depreciation is clearly destroying or taking property. Property is not only ownership of particular lands or chattels, but it embraces the value they have by reason of their legal relations to all other things. All rights in a street which the residents of a city have in common are administered, under legislative authority, by the city council as trustees for all its citizens, and hence the council's consent to the use of the street by the railroad company is binding on the city at large (Cherry v. Rock Hill,
As was intimated in Ross v. Ry. Co.,
The great majority of the older authorities sustain appellant's view that the doctrine above stated applies only where the owner of the abutting property also owns the fee in the street, but not where he has only an easement, the fee being in the State or the city. A careful collation of the cases supporting this position is found in 2 Dillon on Mun. Corp., sec. 702, note. But this doctrine is now completely overturned. 2 Dillon on Munic. Corp., secs. 704 and 723c;Story v. R. Co., supra; Lahr. v. R. Co.,
It is difficult to imagine a right more empty and theoretical than private ownership of the fee in the street of an established city. The possibility of regaining possession of the property by abandonment of the street is so remote that it may ordinarily be regarded a negligible factor. The adjacent owner has no present beneficial use differing in the slightest degree from that which is acquired by a purchaser, for himself and his assigns, who buys a lot abutting on a street laid out by the State or the city on its own land. In the one case, in his dedication he retains, and in the other, by the State's or the city's dedication he acquires, certain street privileges which constitute property.
But it is not the mere laying of a railroad track and the operation of a railroad in a street that would entitle abutting land owners to compensation, when, as in these cases, they *Page 524
have not the fee in the street, and have, therefore, not even a technical interest in it beyond the right to use it for street purposes. Hence it is only the substantial depreciation of the value of the abutting lots that can be assessed in their favor, and the measure of the assessment is the decline in the value of the property consequent upon the use of the street by the railroad. The difference in value should be substantial, and not fanciful or conjectural, for the advance of society imports increased friction among its members; and if the law sanctioned the holding up for compensation of public and private enterprises on account of mere inconvenience or annoyance, it would impede rather than promote the public welfare. We shall not attempt to add anything to the very clear statement of the law on this subject made by Mr. Justice Jones in Allen v. Union Oil Co.,
We proceed to the consideration of the several cases in view of the legal conclusion above stated. The jury determines the amount of the assessment, the Court can only fix the principles on which it should be made. If the foregoing statement of the law is correct, it will not be denied that the injunction in the case of Martha Holmes must be dissolved. Maria L. Taylor, Eliza Burton and her cotenants, Mary E. Higbee, John N. Finley and Aaron Greer have corner lots, and hence have access from another street. This fact may lessen the depreciation, but it does not destroy their right to have the loss of value assessed. It is alleged that Emma L. Pierce, Margaret Day, John N. Finley, Mary E. Higbee, and Eliza Burton and her cotenants, have encroached on Lincoln street, and it is contended that in so far as the injury to the lots of these parties arises from, or is increased by, such encroachment, they can make no claim against the railroad company. The appellant has attacked with great force the conclusion reached by the Court in Crocker v. Collins,
With the modification indicated above, the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.