71 Wash. 102 | Wash. | 1912
The appellant, a railroad company, constructed a railroad between the city of Centraba, in the state of Washington, and the city of Aberdeen therein. In doing so, it was found necessary to erect a bridge across the Chehalis river, at a point on the same where the tides ebb and flow. Before the bridge was erected, plans and specifications thereof were submitted to and approved by the proper officers of the United States and the state of Washington, and the erection of the bridge authorized.
Inside of the harbor lines, the bridge was erected wholly upon lands belonging to the railroad company. Lying immediately to the north of the railroad company’s lands, on the west side of the river, were lands belonging to the respondents. These consisted of a freehold interest in lots 1 and 2 of block 52, as known and designated upon the original plat of the city of Aberdeen, and lot 5, in tract 17, of the Aberdeen Tide and Shore Lands, as platted by the state of Washington; and a leasehold interest granted by the state, having some fifteen years to run, in the harbor area lying in front of lot 5, a tract of land some 68 feet in width and 103 feet in length. The railroad company’s bridge did not cross the Chehalis river at right angles to the stream, but crossed the same somewhat diagonally; the easterly end of the bridge —the end across the stream from the respondents’ property —being farther up the stream than the westerly end. The effect of this diagonal course caused the northerly side of the bridge to make an angle with the southern line of the respondents’ property of some 21° 26/, or an angle of 88° 84/ with the line marking the harbor area. The northerly side of the bridge was constructed within six inches of the southeast corner of the leased harbor area, and the bridge as it crossed the stream passed in front of this area. The bridge was erected on concrete piers, with a draw in the center of the stream. One of these piers was erected inside the harbor area, but close to the water side thereof, and another some 161 feet therefrom out into the stream.
The errors first assigned relate to the admission of evidence. The respondents, over the objection of the*appellant, were permitted to show that, subsequent to the time of the establishment by the state of the harbor lines in front of their property and their lease of the harbor area included therein, the government engineers made a change in the government pier head line in front thereof by moving the same further out into the stream; that, whereas, such pier head line had been established originally so as to practically coincide with the state’s outer harbor line, the change placed it some twenty-six feet further out therefrom. They were permitted to show, also, that certain persons holding property situated further up the river than the respondents’ property had erected wharves extending into the stream out to this changed pier head line. The evidence was admitted on the theory, as the court explained, that the change in the pier head line tended to enhance the value of the respondents’ property. This evidence we think should not have been admitted. Were it necessary for a better understanding of the surrounding situation to show that the government pier head line had
It is not necessary to discuss the question whether the United States may, against the will of the state, give authority to a private individual to erect structures in the navigable waters of the state, as the United States has never manifested its purpose so to do. The effect of the congres
“The secretary of war, acting under the authority conferred by congress, may assent to the erection by private parties of such a structure. Without such assent the structures cannot be erected by them. But under existing legislation they must, before proceeding under such an authority, obtain also the assent of the state acting by its constituted agencies.” Cummings v. Chicago, 188 U. S. 410.
The court permitted certain witnesses to give it as their opinion that the piers supporting the bridge located nearest the respondents’ property would cause a shoaling of the waters on their up river sides, and that this shoaling would interfere with the water approach to the wharves erected on such property. The appellant objected to the introduction of the evidence when the same was offered, and urges in this court that its admission was error. We think the contention is well founded. The pier nearest to the respondents’ property was erected on the harbor area which the appellant had leased from the state. It is a lawful structure, and there is no pretense that it was carelessly or negligently constructed. Such being the facts, such incidental damage as it might do to the respondents’ property in the way of causing the waters to shoal is damnum absque injuria, and cannot be recovered for by the respondents. Indeed, it is contemplated by the constitution and statutes creating this area that it shall be used in the aid of. commerce and navigation. The lessee thereof is permitted to place upon such land, even to the full extent of its area, docks, wharves and other structures. These may be constructed of such material as the owner decides most fit, even to the extent of shutting off entirely the flow of water thereon. This must be the rule, else no lessee of the harbor area could improve his property without paying damage to the adjoining lessees.
The foregoing considerations require the exclusion of the evidence objected to as to each of the piers. It is well, however, to say that the rule announced will not preclude the respondents from subsequently maintaining an action for damages if actionable injury be done to their property in the future by the shoaling of the waters around the outer pier. The railroad company, by the construction of the bridge, assumed the responsibility of compensating the owners for all real property taken or damaged thereby. If this was not done in the original condemnation suit, action can be maintained for such injuries as they accrue whether immediately or in the future.
For the purpose of showing in what manner the property was damaged by the construction of the bridge, and the
We think, however, that it was not a correct measure of the damages to the propérty to take the difference in its value immediately before and immediately after the construction of the bridge. This method of admeasurement necessarily included damages which were not recoverable, as it included the general damage suffered alike by all property on the stream caused by the injury to navigation which the erection of the bridge entailed. It may be true that damages from this cause increases as the bridge is approached, but it is nevertheless a nonrecoverable item, since the dif
But it is said that the court in its instructions to the jury cured any error that might be predicated upon this omission in the evidence. The court did, it is true, instruct the jury to the effect that, for any interference with the navigation of the river caused by the bridge, no damages were recoverable. But it is plain that this could not cure the error here complained of, as such error was fundamentally inherent in the evidence itself, and could not be reached by instruction. Stated in another way, the evidence furnished no means by which the jury could ascertain what portion of the decrease in value of the property caused by the bridge was due to the hindrance to navigation, or what portion of such damages was due to the manner in which the bridge was erected, and as the omission could be supplied by evidence only, it was not curable by instructions to the jury. The remaining assignments require no separate consideration. The judgment is reversed, and a new trial awarded.
Mount, C. J., Ellis, and Morris, JJ., concur.