69 Mo. 157 | Mo. | 1878
Plaintiff was owner of a lot on Water street in the city of Lexington, on which he had a dwelling house. The grade of said street had been established by the city prior to June 3rd, 1872, when the city council passed an ordinance granting the .Burlington & Southwestern Railway Company a right of way along said street for the purpose of constructing and operating a railroad thereon. The company, under this ordinance, made an embankment along the street, in front of plaintiff’s property, from twelve to fifteen feet high, and, according to the testimony of some of the witnesses, several feet above the established grade of the street, preventing the entrance to plaintiff’s property by vehicles from the street, obstructing the flow of falling water, and causing it to stand in a pond in front of and upon said property and otherwise damaging said property. The evidence tended to establish the allegations in the petition, and the questions presented arise upon instructions given for plaintiff, and instructions refused which were asked b}r defendant.
The following were given for plaintiff: 1. The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the testimony that plaintiff has been in the uninterrupted and continued
2. That if they find from the evidence that plaintiff was, at the commencement of this suit, the owner and in possession of, (describing the property,) and that said lot fronts on Water street, then he is entitled, in law, to the uninterrupted use and enjoyment of said street, and if they further find that he has, by permission of defendant, been deprived of the use of said street, then he is entitled to recover, &c.
3. If they find for plaintiff, the measure of damages will be the difference in the market value of the property immediately before said embankment was placed on the street, and its value immediately afterwards, not exceeding $1,000, taking into account only the damage resulting from the embankment being placed in the street by the authority and permission of defendant.
The following were asked by defendant: 1. The court instructs the jury that the city charter gave to the city council thé power and authority, by ordinance, to direct and control the construction and laying of railroad tracks in the streets and alleys of said city, and, to require that the railroad tracks, &c., shall be so constructed and laid as to interfere, as little as possible, with the ordinary travel and use of the streets and alleys, and that sufficient space shall be left on either side of said track for the safe and convenient passage of teams and persons, and to re•quire that said railroad construct, and keep in repair, suitable crossings at intersections of the street, and if the jury find from the evidence -that the city council did, by ordinance dated June 3rd, 1872, grant the right of way to said railroad company along said Water street, and that, by provisions of said ordinance the said railroad was required to leave said street in as good condition as when the work thereon began, and also required that, in making
2. The court further instructs the jury that if they find from the evidence that the plaintiff’s said fence is situated in said Water street, and if the jury further find from the evidence that by reason thereof the plaintiff’s free use of said street is obstructed, and -if they further find from the evidence that by the removal thereof, the plaintiff would have sufficient space for .the safe and convenient passage of teams and persons between his said property and the said embankment along said street, then the plaintiff’s said property is not injured by reason of having his ingress and egress, to and from, interrupted by the said obstructions caused thereby, and defendant is not liable therefor.
3. The court further instructs the jury that this is a civil action for damages, and that the law devolves upon the plaintiff' the burden of proving his case to the satisfaction of the jury, by a preponderance of evidence, and unless the plaintiff' has proved his damage by a preponderance of evidence, the jury shall find for the defendant.
The foregoing instructions were granted.
The following instructions, asked by defendant, were refused, and made matter of exception: 4. If the jury find from the evidence that the embankment in front of plaintiff’s lot was, in filling, made to conform to the estab
5. The court instructs the jury that the city council of the city of Lexington, had, by charter, the power and right to pass the ordinance dated June 3rd, 1872, entitled an ordinance in relation to the right of way along Water street to the Lexington, Lake & G-ulf Railroad Company, by authority of which ordinance the said embankment, railroad iron and ties were placed in said street in front of plaintiif’s property, and if, from the evidence, the jury believe that said embankment, railroad iron and ties were so placed in said street, according to the requirements and provisions of said ordinance, then the court instructs the jury that although the rains and melting snows descending and running from other parts of the city might cause pools and ponds of water to accumulate in and upon the property of the plaintiff described in the petition, then the defendant is not responsible for any damage occasioned by such water, and the jury shall not consider the same in estimating the damages occasioned thereby.
6. The plaintiff in this case, in order to recover judgment against the defendant for the injuries alleged in the petition, must prove, to the satisfaction of the jury, that the city of Lexington caused the embankment of earth and the railroad iron and ties to be placed in front of plaintiff’s property, and thereby caused the injuries complained of, or that said work was done under the direction and supervision of the city officers and employees, for the purpose of promoting some design or enterprise, wherein the said city had an immediate and direct interest, otherwise the jury will find for defendant.
7. The court further instructs the jury that if they find from the evidence that the said railroad company has
8. The court further instructs the jury that they shall disregard al1 evidence concerning the damage caused to the premises of the plaintiff, consequent upon the stoppage of water in front of and upon plaintiff's property, caused by the rain descending and being collected thereon, by said railroad embankment, as not constituting any legal ground of action or complaint against the defendant in this cause.
9. The court further instructs the j ury that they shall discard from their consideration all evidence concerning the obstruction of plaintiff’s view by reason of said railroad embankment, as not constituting any proper element of damage in this cause, and not being any ground of legal demand against defendant.
10. The court further instructs the jury that if they find from the evidence that the plaintiff’s fence is situated in the said Water street, and that the property adjacent to the said plaintiff’s property on the west is also several feet over the said line of said street, whereby plaintiff’s free use of said street is obstructed, and that by the removal thereof the plaintiff’ would have sufficient space for the safe and convenient passage of teams and persons between his said property and the said embankment along said street, then the plaintiff’s said property is not injured by reason of having his egress from and ingress to the same
11. The court further instructs the jury that if they find from the evidence that the said railroad company wrongfully obstructed the said street in the construction of their said road-bed, then the court instructs the jury that the said railroad company is primarily liable to the plaintiff for any injuries he may have sustained by reason of the embankment, railroad iron and ties, as set forth in his petition.
The first instruction for plaintiff is a little inaccurate. The ten years’ possession of plaintiff' should have been next preceding the institution of the suit to . _x _ . ° . . .. ,. m, entitle mm to maintain the action, lnere having been no evidence tending to disprove his ownership, the instruction, with the modification suggested, should have been given.
The second instruction is too broad. There was no evidence tending to prove that he was entirely deprived of use °*' the sfreet> and such interruption as the construction and operation of the railroad would occasion, if properly constructed and operated, he would have to submit to, under the law authorizing the city to grant to the railroad company a right of way for that purpose.
The third instruction is also objectionable, in that it authorized the jury to give plaintiff damages for the ob-3.-. struction of the flow of falling water, thereby causing it to form a pond in front of plaintiff's dwelling and upon his lot. By that instruction they were told that if they found for plaintiff the measure of damages would he the difference in the market value of the property immediately before the embankment was made, and its value immediately afterwards, not exceeding the amount claimed in the petition, taking into account only the damage resulting from the embankment. The evidence showed that the embankment caused the pond of water on the lot. That
“ If such work is, for any reason, tolerated by the public authorities, it is their duty to exercise a supervision over its construction and condition, and it is negligence, and a lack of duty in them, to omit to exercise such supervision.” Wendell v. Mayor, &c., of Troy, supra; and the cases above cited fully support that proposition, and the provision of the ordinance in question, requiring the company to leave the street in as good condition as when the work was commenced, does not relieve her of liability to property owners. Eor the violation of that condition the company may be liable to the city, but the city is, nevertheless, primarily liable to the injured property owner. There is no doubt that the railroad company would also have been liable to plaintiff. Lackland v. The N. M. R. R. Co., 31 Mo. 186; Tate v. The M., K. & T. R. R. Co., 64 Mo. 150.
The foregoing views, we think, sufficiently indicate which of the instructions, in our judgment, should have been given, and which were properly refused, without commenting upon them in detail. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed.