Cheever v. Shedd

5 F. Cas. 534, 13 Blatchf. 258, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1540
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 28, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 F. Cas. 534 (Cheever v. Shedd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cheever v. Shedd, 5 F. Cas. 534, 13 Blatchf. 258, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1540 (circtdvt 1876).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, District Judge.

In the year 1872, a new highway, of fifty feet in width, was duty laid out and established in the city of Burlington, by the proper court having jurisdiction over the subject, which highway said court directed should be completed on or before October 15th, 1873. The highway is 1,175 feet in length, extending from College street to Pearl street, and is an extension of a previously existing street, called Union street, so as to form a continuous street with Maiden lane, which last two named streets are also of fifty feet in width. The new street is within about fifty rods of the business centre of Burlington, a city of 1S,-000 inhabitants, and intersects two important streets, and will be considerably used for public travel. About-feet in length and fifty feet in width of the land of John H. Cheever, the complainant, being a portion of a tract of several acres belonging to him, are taken for the street. The court which directed the lay out, the complainant appearing, and being heard thereon, adjudged that he was “entitled to no land damages in consequence of laying out and establishing said highway, the benefit to said Cheever’s premises, through which said highway is laid out, being a full compensation for the land taken for said highway.” It is necessary that said street should have the usual sidewalks, curbs and gutters which are customary in city streets, and it is fit and proper for the full accommodation of the public travel, that the whole street, including roadway and sidewalks, should be of fifty feet in width. The natural surface of the plaintiff’s land, and of the other land over which this street passes, is uneven, being traversed by ravines or hollows, and by knells or bluffs, and it was necessary, in order property to construct the street, and to make a proper grade, that the knolls should be cut through and that the hollows should be filled. The city street commissioners, who had, by statute, the care and superintendence of the highways in the city, and whose duty it was “to make and repair all highways,” in order to put the street in a proper condition for public use and travel, established a grade, which grade required three cuts on the land taken from the plaintiff, one of 168 feet in length and 10.2 feet in depth at the centre, one of 60 feet in length and 2.3 feet in depth at the centre, the third of 61 feet in length and a centre depth of 1.35 feet. The form of all the cuts was that of a knoll, sloping evenly each way. This grade is a proper one for the purposes of the street. All the earth which was taken from these cuts was used to fill the hollows in the street, but other earth could have been hauled for the same purpose from a greater distance. The street commissioners, in making these cuttings, cut down intentionally the soil and turf upon said street perpendicularly, or very nearly so, up to the extreme boundaries or lines of said street, and claimed and exercised the right to cut said highway perpendicularly up to the limits thereof. The soil is clay and quicksand, and the effect of the perpendicular excavation, unless the bank is protected, is, that the adjoining soil will slip, and be gradually sloughed off by the action of the rain and frost, until a slope has been formed sufficiently inclined to prevent further slipping. An unprotected perpendicular embankment of ten feet in height would be encroached upon, in two or three years, to an extent of five feet, before a proper slope [535]*535■was formed. This result has already commenced upon the land of the complainant. If the city authorities have no right to cause this incidental injury to the adjoining land, their proper course is to use only such a width as will leave a sufficient slope, or to use the entire width and build a retaining wall. If the complainant is remediless, he must grade his land in conformity with the street line, or build a retaining wall himself. A suitable retaining wall would cost $500. Grading the land would probably be less expensive, and would be more advantageous to the owner of the land, in the event of any future disposition or sale of the property. The land of the complainant which has been taken for the street, is part of a large tract belonging to the complainant, used heretofore, with the buildings upon it, as a gentleman’s mansion. Where the deep cut is made, the land is not ornamented with shrubbery and shade trees, as is the case with the portion adjacent to the house. The present suit is a bill for an injunction to restrain the defendants, who are the street commissioners and the superintendent of streets, from excavating in such a manner as to cause the injury to the adjacent land which has been mentioned. The superintendent has, by the City charter, the immediate care and supervision of the streets, and his duty is to see that they are properly constructed and kept in repair. After the bill was filed, a provisional injunction was granted, which is still in force. The bill proceeds upon the idea that the defendants are acting in the premises without reasonable care.

From the preceding statement, it will be seen, that the proper authority has directed the construction of a street of fifty feet in width, and has assessed the damages which will arise to the complainant from the taking of his land, which damages include all those which are immediately incident to and consequent upon the construction of the highway. An assessment of damages is for the direct and immediate damage resulting from the laying out of the highway. The owner is to be remunerated for the land taken, for the deprivation of “any right or privilege attached to it, and for the damage done by the lay out to the land connected with that which is covered by the highway, and of which it was a part.” Clark v. Saybrook, 21 Conn. 313. When a part only of the land of the owner is taken for a public work, the damage which will necessarily result, from the use of the part which is taken, to the land which is not occupied by the public, is to be estimated. When the remaining land is separated by the new highway from outbuildings, or from a supply of water, or is left in unsalable condition, or unfit for occupancy, or is divided by high embankments which cause inconvenience, the effect of these and similar circumstances, and the effect which the appropriation will have in bene-fitting the remaining land, are to be taken into consideration in the estimate of damages. In the case of a new highway, the general grade which must be adopted, so as. to conform to the existing grade of connecting streets, and so as to make a convenient highway, are obvious to the appraisers of damages, who inspect the premises and can see the injury and the special benefit which the opening of a highway must necessarily cause to the whole land. The presumption is, that the appraisal is for the value of the property taken and the damage which will specially result to the residue by such taking. But, it is truly said, that the appraisal assumes and presupposes that the highway is to be constructed with reasonable care, and if, “for want of reasonable care and skill in the construction of such work, unnecessary damage is caused, it is not warranted by the right of eminent domain.” Sprague v. Worcester, 13 Gray, 195. Consequential damages which result to the remaining land, from want of reasonable care in the construction of the highway, are not included in the estimate of damages. It is contended that this highway was not constructed with reasonable care, by reason of the fact that it was excavated upon the extreme limits of the land taken, so as to cause the adjoining land to be deprived of its lateral support, and so as to inflict an actionable injury.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Burford v. City of Grand Rapids
18 N.W. 571 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1884)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 534, 13 Blatchf. 258, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheever-v-shedd-circtdvt-1876.