132 Mo. 1 | Mo. | 1895
This is an action against the defendant for damages to plaintiff’s property, which she alleges it sustained by reason of the ‘ erection of a bridge by the city alongside of her property on Twenty-first street.
The petition alleges that the plaintiff owned a lot on the northeast corner of Twenty-first and Randolph streets, having a front of thirty feet on the north line of Randolph street by a depth northwardly of one hundred feet on Twenty-first street; that on the fifteenth day of August, 1889, the city commenced, and has since completed, the construction of a bridge on Twenty-first street, which has the effect of depriving plaintiff of access to Twenty-first street, the abutment of the bridge alongside of plaintiff’s property being about fifteen feet high, and distant fifteen feet from the west line of plaintiff’s property; that the city condemned twenty feet off of the west part of plaintiff’s lot so as to widen Twenty-first street, that is, plaintiff’s lot was originally fifty feet front, and the city condemned the west twenty feet thereof, and left plaintiff only thirty feet front; that the city paid plaintiff $12,000 for the property so appropriated, and that the remaining portion of plaintiff’s property has been damaged $10,000. The specific damages alleged are that the bridge alongside of plaintiff’s property is higher than the level of her property and that the wind blows the dust and other deposits off the bridge into plaintiff’s premises thereby producing sickness and reducing the rental value of the -property; and that the proximity of the bridge to her property has reduced its market value correspondingly. The answer is a general denial.
The measure of damages in this case was the' difference, less, if anything, in the value of plaintiff’s property immediately before the construction of the bridge, and immediately afterward, as its market value was affected by reason of the erection of the bridge. Slattery v. St. Louis, 120 Mo. 183; Spencer v. Street R’y Co., 120 Mo. 154; Kansas City v. Morton, 117 Mo. 446.
The rule thus announced is the theory upon which •the case was tried by the court below, which is evidenced from the instructions given. And there can be no question as to its correctness. Moreover, the evidence showed that plaintiff’s property was enhanced in value by reason of the construction of the bridge, and that instead of being injured in consequence thereof, she has really been benefited. The judgment was clearly for the right party, and is affirmed.