132 Ky. 322 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Appellant, who- was plaintiff in the court below, is the owner of four lots, with dwellings on them, on the south side of Third street in Vanceburg, and one on the north side.- This- action was for injuries- to that property from the construction, maintenance, and operation of appellees’ railro-ad along Third street, on a different grade, and in a different manner, and to- an increased extent, from that authorized hy the ordinance of the town council granting the right oi way along the street. There was a verdict for the defendants.
The ordinance granting appellees the right of way along the street contained this condition:
“ (1) That in all cases where it is rendered necessary by the construction of said track, the said company shall make suitable crossings of all streets and alleys upon or over which said road shall run, and in a proper and convenient manner fill and grade the same to conform to said crossings, and that all that portion of Third street lying between alleys Nos. 1 and 4 shall be by said company filled and graded to conform to the grade of said road, and paved and planked the entire width of said street, that is, from curb to curb, and keep same in thorough repair, the cutting and crossing of said streets and alleys and the planking or paving aforesaid by said' company to' be done under the supervision and to the satisfaction of a committee to be appointed by the council.
“(2) The said' company shall keep the crossings, the space within the tracks- and for two feet on each side thereof outside the tracks, in thorough repair, and whenever said streets and alleys are cut down or tom up by said1 company in repairing its tracks or con*326 structing its road, the said company shall restore the-same without delay in good condition and in like manner and with material as before.”
The grant was to build a double track railway along and within the street. Appellant’s lots' are between alleys No. 1 and No. 4 on Third street. The-tracks take up about .all the street between the- pavement curbings; it is elevated from two to four feet, above the original street level; it is not planked or filled in between the rails and on the outside of the-rails so as to provide a suitable or safe usable highway for vehicles; it has been raised a little from time to time until there has been an encroachment of 18-inches during the past five or six years, according to-the testimony of appellant’s witnesses; additional sidings have been laid in the street in front of appellant’s lots; a signal system has been installed in the-street by appellees, which requires cement pests, about two feet high to be set in the street at intervals along the track, and along or near the top of these posts a pipe is run, which contains- or constitutes, apparatus for operating the switches and other signals; switches have been changed, removed to other-points, and the targets and towers enlarged — is appellant’s contention. Much of this is disputed byappellees. But the fact seems to be conceded that-the street is not fit for travel by vehicles because of' the obstruction by the tracks, and that they are purposely left in that condition by the railroad company because if the street should be traveled it would bean exceedingly dangerous way for the travelers, entailing greater caution on the part of the railroad, operatives, or death and injury on the traveler's and. their horses. It is conceded, too, that the street has not been and is not now planked or otherwise graded
The precise extent of the powers conferred upon the Maysville & Big Sandy Railroad Company, in its charter granted by the Legislature before the War have not been brought to our attention. That company built this road. It may be assumed that the company was authorized to obtain rights of way, even including the way over or upon public streets, when necessary. But it has not been claimed that the .railroad company was given the power to appropriate .a city street to the exclusion of the public, and we -doubt if it were competent for the Legislature to have granted such power. Assuming that the company had the power to acquire a right of way over the city’s .streets as might be granted by ordinance of the city, still the right of the railroad was only equal to, or at least not in extinguishment of, the public’s use of the street for the purpose of ordinary travel. In this state it is held that a railroad upon a public street is not am additional servitude, but is included in the purpose of the original dedication of the land for the •public use as a highway. Lex. & O. R. v. Applegate, 8 Dana, 289, 33 Am. Dec. 497; Fulton v. Short Route Ry. & Transfer Co., 85 Ky. 640, 4 S. W. 332, 9. Ky. Law Rep. 291, 7 Am. St. Rep. 619. This is because, .and only because, it was deemed that the railroad was doing some part of the same thing which the general public had acquired the right to do by the original
As to the third ground: The argument is that, inasmuch as the wrongful appropriation of the street by the character of the grade adopted when the railroad was built and the failure to then place the street surface in fit condition for travel a permanent
There was considerable evidence introduced as to the existence of another street recently opened parallel with Third street, and which afforded appellant and his tenants a safer and better way to these lots, although it let them into the rear of them instead of
A juror on his voir dire qualified, declaring that he had not formed nor expressed an opinion concerning the merits of the case. But he had. The fact was ■not learned by appellant till after the juror had signed and returned the verdict, and the jury discharged'. This was urged as a ground for a new trial. Being established, it should have prevailed.
The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial under proceedings consistent herewith.