Baltimore Belt Railroad v. Baltzell

1 Balt. C. Rep. 445
CourtBaltimore City Superior Court
DecidedApril 23, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Balt. C. Rep. 445 (Baltimore Belt Railroad v. Baltzell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore Belt Railroad v. Baltzell, 1 Balt. C. Rep. 445 (Md. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

RITCHIE, J.

Henry E. Baltzell is the owner in fee of a lot of ground situated on the corner of Mount Royal avenue and Dolphin street and improved by a brick building, the first floor of which is intended to .be used as a store and the upper stories are occupied as a dwelling. He owns to the centre of each street, his title between the building line and the centre of each street being subject to the public easement of these respective highways. The Belt Railroad Company requires and has undertaken to condemn of this property for the construction of its proposed tunnel, a triangular parcel of ground lying under the bed of these two streets and within the angle formed by the intersection of their centre lines. This parcel runs about eighty feet along the centre line of Dolphin street, about seventy feet along that of Mount Royal avenue, and its base line is one hundred and seven feet.

The statute under which this inquisition is had [Code, Art. 23, Sec. 167] provides that the jury shall “value the damages which the owner or owners will sustain by the use and occupation of the property required,” and the right which it is now proposed to acquire is the right to take, use and occupy the parcel of ground in question for the construction and maintenance in perpetuity of a railroad tunnel, through which will pass, it is said, some two hundred trains a day; one wall of which will come under the corner of the sidewalk and the top of which will come within from four to six feet of the surface of the ground. For the condemnation of this right the jury has valued the damages which the owner will sustain at the nominal sum of five dollars, and he has excepted to the ratification of the inquisition on the ground that the jury misapprehended the rules of law which should have governed them in estimating the damages, and that the damages are insufficient. In my judgment the exceptions are sustained by the evidence, and the inquisition must be set aside.

This is not the taking of an isolated parcel of ground. The parcel which it is proposed to take is under the surface of the street, but, subject to the public easement for the purposes of a street, it is just as much a part of the corner lot in question as is that portion on which the building stands. It is all one lot, although part of it is subject to a right of way in the public. The part in the bed of the street is held as part of the same freehold and not as a mere appurtenance to that portion of the lot which abuts on the street. Thomas vs. Ford, 63 Md. 346; Jackson vs. Hathaway, 15 John 447; [447]*447Chicago vs. Rumsey, 87 Ill. 348; Elliott on Streets 519; Railroad vs. Brown, 23 Fla. 104.

Where part of a lot is to be taken under such a statute as this the damages to be considered embrace two elements. 1st. The value of the part actually taken, which includes any damage that will be done to the rest of the lot by the separation; 2d, the injury that will result to the rest of the lot by the use which is to be made of the part taken. The general rule for ascertaining the total damages is to inquire what is the present fair market value of the whole lot; and, then, what will if be after the condemnation of the part taken; the difference is the amount, to which the owner will be entitled. Archer’s case, 9 Gill & J. 528; 2 Wood R. R. Sec. 259. Under this rule, as applied to this case, the inquiry should be, what is the present fair market value of this corner property subject to the public easement over part of it; and, then, what will be its fair market value after the taking of this parcel, as depreciated by the act of taking and by the right to appropriate it to all the purposes of a railroad tunnel; the difference will represent the damages.

The jury, I think, has erred in respect to each of the elements of damage referred to. They have treated the owner’s title to the bed of the street as of only nominal value, and have evidently passed no judgment, on the question of whether the rest of the property will be injured or not by the uses to which the parcel taken will be put; having acted probably under the impression that if any injury should hereafter occur from the construction of the tunnel or the operation through it of the railroad, the owner would have a right of action for such injury.

In the application of the general rule we are met by somewhat novel conditions, which have occasioned controversy between the parties and which ought to be more fully referred to for the guidance of another jury. The matters in controversy are most conveniently shown by stating the contention of the company. It is, that, this parcel is of only nominal value, and that, nothing can be awarded in this proceeding but its value; that if injury should result from the proposed use and occupation of this parcel, the owner will have a right of action for the same, under Section 109 of Article 23, when it occurs, and the possibility of such injury is not to be considered in this proceeding; that if it is to be, it must be considered with reference only (1) to such injuries as may result from the use to be made of this parcel, and (2) must be confined to the corner property.

First — The adjacent property. Henry E. Baltzell is also the owner of the leasehold interest in several improved lots adjoining the corner property to the westward, and claims that by reason of their contiguity he is entitled also in these proceedings to all damages that may be caused to these adjoining houses and lots by the taking and use of the parcel in question; that because they are contiguous and there is one owner, the whole of them are to be treated as one property. This is not correct. These adjoining lots are separated in fact both by deed and improvements ; they are improved by dwelling houses, and each of them is intended for separate occupancy. The parcel to be taken is a part of the corner lot, and this lot was acquired at a different time, under a different title, is held in a different interest, and, more especially, is separately improved and is not, and is not intended to be, used in common with any of the adjoining property. Under these circumstances the corner lot is a separate and distinct property, and, under these proceedings, is the only one in respect to which damages are to be awarded. Lewis, Sec. 475; Wood R. R., Sec. 262; Potts vs. Railroad, 119 Pa. 278. The property, in respect of which damag'es are to he allowed in this case, is that property, of which a part is taken, and the general terms of the statute should be so construed. St. Louis R. R. vs. Brown, 58 Ill. 61 ; Bangor vs. McComb, 60 Me. 290.

If any injury should be done to any of this adjoining property by the construction of the tunnel, or the location of the road, the owner will have his remedy in an action for damages.

Second. The Title and Value of the Parcel Taken. — As I have stated, the jury erred in putting upon this a merely nominal value because it lies under the bed of the street. The owner of such a parcel of ground has more than [448]*448a mere naked legal title to the fee; though the damages for taking it may not be the same, his title is the same as is that to the soil under his house. It might have no value in the market as a separate piece of ground, but apart from the question of damages that may be caused by its use, it has a substantial value to the owner, and an important relation to the improved portion of the lot. The jury seems to have overlooked this relation. If this parcel could be taken for nothing, one who owned to the centre would be no better off than a mere abutter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Balt. C. Rep. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-belt-railroad-v-baltzell-mdsuperctbalt-1894.