68 Mo. App. 642 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
The answer was a general denial coupled with certain matters pleaded as a special defense. An ordinance of the city of Harrisonville was pleaded which authorized defendant to lay its track on Grand avenue, and operate its cars oyer the same, and to build and operate side tracks thereon, depot stations, and approaches thereto, etc. Also a certain other ordinance establishing the grade of Grand avenue. It was further pleaded that it constructed, its said tracks along Grand avenue in conformity to the grade established by the said last referred to ordinance; and that it so graded and graveled said street that it was left in a first-class condition, and on a level with the plaintiff’s lot. The reply was a general denial. There was atrial and judgment for plaintiff and from the latter, defendant has appealed.
At the conclusion of all the evidence the defendant interposed a demurrer thereto which was by the court disallowed. The question thus raised is made the principal basis of the appeal.
. About one hundred feet west of where Grand avenue is intersected by Independence street the defendant’s tracks begin to curve to the north and pass out of said street at the east side of the block, a distance of about two hundred feet east of said street intersections. When defendant’s cars occupy said curve line on part of said track, they form an obstruction to travel along the north side of said street at that point. The crossing of the track on said curve is about one hundred and fifty feet from the east line of the plaintiff’s lot'. The plaintiff testified that the defendant frequently used that part of its tracks situate on Grand avenue between Independence street and the point where the said tracks pass out of the first named street for the purpose of storing its empty cars. He further testified that when defendant’s tracks were used for storage and switch purposes that teams driving along the north side of Grand avenue and in front of his lot, could not get out by driving eastward and were compelled to back out .to the west on Independence stréet. He
The distinction between the nature of the rights of the public in a street and the rights of an individual proprietor to access to his lot from the street, is one which has been asserted by very high authority.- The right of an abutting owner to access to and from the street is a private right in the sense that it is something different from the right which the members of the public have to use the street for public purposes. So “the law,” to quote, “is well settled that the abutting lot owner must show to entitle him to recover damages for an obstruction in a highway, that the damages are peculiar to him,
In the present case the plaintiff’s lot was not rendered inaccessible or inconvenient by reason of the location of the defendant’s tracks in front of it. There was an open, well graded, macadamized strip between the plaintiff’s lot and the defendant’s north track which was thirty-seven and a half feet wide. This was of equal or greater width than many of the business and residence streets in two or more of the principal cities in this state. There is no pretense that the defendant’s tracks in front of the plaintiff’s lot, even when occupied by its cars, interfered with the unrestricted access thereto. There was ample room in front of plaintiff’s lot for those driving vehicles to turn round without inconvenience. These tracks did not destroy the use of the street in front of plaintiff’s lot, nor was the use such as to deprive the plaintiff of access thereto. What right or easement connected with the lot has been directly and specially affected by the location and use of defendant’s tracks or the street in front thereof? Unless the plaintiff has been disturbed in the enjoyment of some right which he was entitledto make use of, in connection with the property, he should not recover. Van De Vere v. Kansas City, 107 Mo. 83.
nal use. Manufacturing Co. v. R. R., supra; Julia Building Association v. Bell Tel. Co., 88 Mo. 273; Smith v. R. R., 98 Mo. 24; R’y v. R. R., 97 Mo. 469; Cross v. R. R., 77 Mo. 321. In the last cited case it was said: “Conceding the right to lay the track in the street, the company
No doubt if the defendant used its tracks and the said street for switching purposes, or for the storage of its cars, that this was a gross perversion of the highway — such an improper and imprudent use of it as to constitute a nuisance. Schopp v. St. Louis, 117 Mo. 131. But since the plaintiff had perfect access to his lot, the inconvenience to which he was subjected by the improper use which defendant made of its tracks was precisely the same in kind as that of all other persons who had occasion to use the street. His might have been greater in degree, but not different in kind. The nuisance was a public one and the physical facts show that the injury to the plaintiff’s lot, if any, was occasioned by a public, rather than a private, wrong.
But the plaintiff objects that the defendant permitted its cars to stand over the crossing on the curve in its tracks east of the plaintiff’s lot, and that this constituted an obstruction in the street which prevented the through travel along the north side of the street. Now if this obstruction had been of a permanent character, if it had been an embankment or a cut at right angles below the grade of the street, it would only have been when the plaintiff went east that he would have come in contact with it. His inconvenience and that of persons going to and from his grocery store would have been exactly the same as that of other persons desiring to use the street. Persons having occasion to pass east' from the plaintiff’s lot over Grand avenue, could have done so without encountering any obstruction by. passing from Independence street along the south side of the railway tracks; and persons desiring to go west over said street could, in like manner, have passed along on that side.
In this view of the case it becomes unnecessary to notice the defendant’s other assignments of error. The judgment will, accordingly, be reversed.