167 Mass. 311 | Mass. | 1897
The respondent city laid out a street or boulevard one hundred and twenty feet wide through the petitioner’s land. On each side of the street, in addition to the land taken for this use, it took a strip eighteen feet in width “ to be used for sloping the bank for said street or public way so far as is necessary therefor.” On the petitioner’s land was a house about fifty-four feet from the outside line of the eighteen foot strip. There was evidence that the land on each side of the street was suitable for building lots. Opposite the dwelling-
The only exception relied on by the respondent is to the instruction of the presiding judge that the petitioner would have no right to construct a retaining wall either on the one hundred and twenty foot strip or on any portion of the eighteen foot strip without making some arrangement with the authorities of the city. The judge gave very full and plain instructions in regard to the rights of each of the parties to use the eighteen foot strip, to which no exceptions were taken. These were, in substance, omitting the illustrations and explanations, that the city could use it in any reasonable way for the sloping of the bank, and that the petitioner could make any use of it that would not interfere with the exercise of this right. Commonwealth v. King, 13 Met. 115, 119. Morton v. Moore, 15 Gray, 573, 576. Clark v. Worcester, 125 Mass. 226. Allen v. Boston, 159 Mass. 324. He went further, — and this is the only part of the instruction that is objected to,—and told the jury that the building of a retaining wall on. the eighteen foot strip, or on the line between that and the travelled part of the street, would be an encroachment upon the city’s. rights that would interfere with possible methods of using the land for sloping the bank which the city might choose to adopt. It is argued that the jury should have been left rto decide, as a question of fact, whether the building of such a wall would interfere with any possible use of the land that the city could lawfully make. If, considered as a practical question, there is reasonable. doubt about the answer to it, it should have been left to the jury. The counsel for the respondent has not questioned the absolute right of the city to use the land for sloping the bank as it may choose, and he has not pointed out any way in which a retaining wall could be built without interfering with possible methods of sloping and finishing the bank that the city might select. Having reference to the beauty as well as the security of the bank, it might slope the land at a certain grade, and cover it
Exceptions overruled.