Anderson v. Stuarts Draft Water Company

87 S.E.2d 756, 197 Va. 36, 1955 Va. LEXIS 192
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 13, 1955
DocketRecord 4409
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 87 S.E.2d 756 (Anderson v. Stuarts Draft Water Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Stuarts Draft Water Company, 87 S.E.2d 756, 197 Va. 36, 1955 Va. LEXIS 192 (Va. 1955).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The State Highway Commissioner brought this declaratory judgment proceeding, Code § 8-578, to have an adjudication of his rights with respect to lowering the grade of a road as against the right asserted by the appellee, Stuarts Draft Water Company, Incorporated, to occupy the subsurface of the road within the right of way with its pipe line. The issue developed was whether the pipe line must be removed or relocated at the expense of the Highway Department or of the Water Company. The court below held with the appellee and the Commissioner appeals.

From the evidence and the stipulation of facts it appears that the Highway Department planned to improve State Route 608, which runs through the village of Stuarts Draft in Augusta county, and the plans called for a lowering of the present grade in places below the level of the pipe line.

Route 608, in the area here involved, was originally acquired as a thirty-foot right of way by the Howardsville Turnpike Company under the Turnpike Act of 1817. Acts 1816-17, ch. 38, p. 41; Code *38 1819, Vol. II, ch. 234, p. 211. Sections 6 and 7 of that act provided that if a turnpike company could not agree with the owner of the land on the terms on which the road was to be opened, the county court would appoint freeholders who would assemble on the land and ascertain the damages which the proprietor would sustain. Section 8 of the act provided:

“* * In performing this duty, they shall consider the proprietor of the land as being the owner of the whole fee simple interest; they shall take into consideration the quantity and quality of the land which the road will occupy, the additional fencing which will be required thereby, and all other inconveniences which will result to the said land from the opening of the said road, and shall combine therewith a just regard to the advantages which the owner of the land will derive from the opening of the road through the same.”

Section 14 provided that the road should be made sixty feet wide at least, eighteen feet of which should be well covered with gravel or stone, to be kept firm and smooth, and in all respects fit for use of heavily laden wagons and other carriages, and on each side a summer road eighteen feet wide should be cleared and kept in good repair.

Howardsville Turnpike Company was incorporated by act of February 17, 1846, Acts 1845-46, ch. 126, p. 95, and made subject to the provisions of the Turnpike Act of 1817, but not compelled to pave the road with stone or gravel, or to make it more than thirty feet wide, or to make a summer road thereto.

The road was constructed by the Turnpike Company about 1848 to a width of approximately thirty feet, but whether the right of way was acquired by agreement or by condemnation is not disclosed. From the time of its construction it was operated by the Turnpike Company until 1864, when it was taken over by the county of Augusta and maintained by it as part of its road system until 1932 when it was incorporated into the State Secondary System of Roads by the Act of Assembly of 1932. Acts 1932, ch. 415, p. 872. It is the present location of State Routes 608 and 610.

The pipe fine in question was installed by W. B. Dodge in 1897 along and under the thirty-foot right of way of this road from a point south of Stuarts Draft northerly to the junction of Route 608 and Stuart street in the village of Stuarts Draft, under easements or permits granted to him by the owners of the underlying fee by *39 deeds of record. The Water Company has succeeded to the easements so granted by deed also of record.

The pipe line has been maintained and operated in its present location since 1897 except in 1913 when the road was macadamized. In the process of that work the pipe line was uncovered, and it was then lowered at the expense of W. B. Dodge, its then owner.

Under the present improvement the alignment of the road is not to be changed but the grade is to be raised or lowered at points on the original right of way, and the lowering requires the relocation of the pipe line in some places. Also at places the right of way is being widened to forty feet and the additional width has been acquired in fee by the Highway Department.

The trial court was of the opinion that the easement or permit for the pipe line under the road so granted to the Water Company constituted property which could not be taken away without the just compensation required by § 58 of our Constitution when property is taken or damaged for public uses. In support of that holding the Water Company relies on Swift & Co. v. Newport News, 105 Va. 108, 52 S. E. 821; Nelson County v. Loving, 126 Va. 283, 101 S. E. 406, and Virginia Hot Springs Co. v. Lowman, 126 Va. 424, 101 S. E. 326. These cases dealt with abutting property owners and declared their right to compensation under the Constitution when a change of grade in a street or road resulted in damage to their adjoining property.

In the last-named case, Virginia Hot Springs Co. v. Lowman, it was sought to enjoin the appellant from constructing a bridle path by the side of the driveway of its turnpike road. There the court rejected the contention of Lowman that the method of using the road must continue to be the same in the future as in the past, and refused the injunction on the ground that the bridle path was not a new and different use of the land dedicated for the road but was in aid of the original use, “making the driveway safer for all classes of travelers, and its construction would not necessarily create any new or greater burden on the lands of the adjacent proprietors.” 126 Va. at 436, 101 S. E. at 330.

It was further said in that case that when the dedication of the right of way was accepted it became complete, the rights of the public then became fixed and no encroachments thereon by former owners or their successors in title could impair the rights of the public therein, nor could title to any part thereof be acquired by *40 adverse possession. Responding to Lowman’s contention that although the appellant kept within its enclosure, yet the grading of the bridle path would damage his adjacent property, the court said that if so he would be entitled to compensation under the doctrine of the Swift case. It was also held in the Lowman case that under the Turnpike Act of 1817 the Turnpike Company could not condemn the fee in land for its purposes but only a right of way, and that the former owner still held title to the land subject to the easement. See also Jordan v. Eve, 72 Va. (31 Gratt.) 1, 10; Bond v. Green, 189 Va. 23, 32, 52 S. E. (2d) 169, 173.

It is the nature and extent of that easement which is in controversy in the present case.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.E.2d 756, 197 Va. 36, 1955 Va. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-stuarts-draft-water-company-va-1955.