City of Cincinnati v. Williams

8 Ohio N.P. 561
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedJuly 1, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. 561 (City of Cincinnati v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Cincinnati v. Williams, 8 Ohio N.P. 561 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1882).

Opinion

Avery, J.

“Gentlemen o’f the jury: — You are sworn to inquire into and assess damages of private property from improvement, by the city, of the Madisonville road, from McMillan street to Woodburn avenue. The damages claimed are for a fill in front of the premises of E. T. Swift and for a cut in front of the premises of B. F. Williams. The inquiry is made in advance of doing the work, but is to be determined upon the same principles as it would be if the work were done.

“At the outset, you are to attend to the question of the right of an abutting lot-owner I to recover for a cut or fill, in front of his [562]*562premises, made by the city in .grading its ; streets. There can be no right to recover at all, except where a former grade having been already made, the property owner has conformed thereto, in making his improvements, j and is injured in respect to his improvenments by the change.

“A moment’s reflection will enable you to , see the reason of this. The city is owner of . its streets for public usages of passage, just | as much as the proprietor of the abutting ! lot is owner of his land. In improving the street for the convenience of passage, the city is upon its own property, and, as a general rule, the abutting owner can not complain of a cut or fill, any more than one neighboring owner can complain of another for cutting or filling upon his own land. The exception is where the city has fixed a grade and the owner has improved his property in conformity, for there, being induced by acts of the city, which may be regarded as conclusive in respect to what would be required for the public use of the street, the owner, having made his improvements, will be entitled to recover for a change by the city to the injury of such improvements. In other words, the general rule is that the city is not liable. The exception is where there has been a former grade, and the property has been improved to that grade. In that event there will be a liability to the extent that the improvements were injured by the change. ' i ’ . ! . : ¡

“The inquiry must begin, therefore, with the question, whether before 1874, when the grade was adopted to which the proposed improvement is to be made, the existing grade of Madisonville road was established. ■ , ! 1 1

“Prior to 1873, that territory was not within the limits of the city. The road was under control of a turnpike company, but country ' owners have the same private rights in adjacent highways as city owners have in adjacent streets, and while it may not appear by any written resolution or order, that the : I | grade of the road to the levels existing was 1 fixed, yet if, by use by the public authorities having charge of the road ,it was made to , appear that such levels had been permanently : adopted, it would be an established grade ' within the instruction given you, and an ad- ; jacent proprietor, improving according to that grade, would be entitled to recover against the city for injury to his improvements by the change. In other words, the establishment of a grade does not necessarily require the passage of an ordinance.or other legislative action, but it may be shown by the nature of the improvement on the surface of the highway, under the direction or sanction of the proper authorities.

“Leaving the question to be determined by you whether, within these principles, the grade of Madisonville road had been fixed prior to the annexation of that territory to the city, and whether the parties had conformed their. improvements to that grade, the question will be next, if you find for them on that issue, as to the amount of damages which they are entitled to recover for the change now proposed by the city. Unless you find there was a grade to which they conformed in making their improvements, the inquiry, of course, is at an end.

“Leaving, as has been said, the question to you, let us take up for a moment the question which, to repeat, will be considered by you only after you have determined the firts question.

“Damages being given only in respect to improvements made in conformity to a grada established by public authority, you will ex-elude from consideration- any improvements made after the ordinance of 1874, which changed the grade. The ground upon which damages are given at all is that the property owner has been led by the action of the public authorities to take an existing grade as established, and so, without expecting change, been induced to make his improvements; blit where a changfe is advertised by the passage of an ordinance, subsequent improvements made by him are at his own risk, in case, when the grade comes t© be made, he is injured.

“Confining, then, your attention to improvements made prior to the ordinance of May, 1874, it may be necessary to say, in the beginning, that damages are to make good the loss sustained by an injury. But they can only be given in money, and will be measured, therefore, only by differences of value in money. Money is the legal standard of values.

“Observing, then, that the right of an abutting owner to recover for change of grade is limited to injury to his improvements, there may be two classes of damages: First, where the nature of the work is such that necessarily part of his improvements will be destroyed. The determination of that class of damage is easy. For illustration, if this improvement is such that the hedge, which is on the line, and the gate and posts will be carried away, it will be easy to determine the loss. I mention these merely to illustrate.

“The other class is more difficult, but still the damages, if any, are to be ascertained. This, as has been said, upon the assumption that the first question left to you is deter-[563]*563wined in favor of the parties. The other class si damage to property by change of grade, consists not in carrying away the improvements, but in affecting their use. A house upon a man’s property to which he could get no access from the street, might be valueless. To the extent, therefore, that the use of his buildings and improvements are affected by impairing the access between his property and the street, if he has a right to recover for change in the street, he is entitled to damages.

“How the extent to which improvements are affected by a change of this sort may be ascertained, is a question upon which there is no certain rule, but it 'must be left to your judgment, taking into consideration estimates and opinions of witnesses, but being in the end your own judgment. Opinions of .witnesses in the waj of estimates of damages are testimony, but only testimony, and it is the province of the jury to judge of the weight of of testimony.

“Because there is no certain rule by which matters of this sort may be determined, the evidence was permitted to take a wide range. You had testimony as to value of the entire property, and as to differences in value that would be occasioned by the contemplated change. You had testimony as to the value of the trees or ornamental shrubbery, and of the driveway. Estimates were also furnished as to the cost of what might be called a retaining wall, and of a slope. That was all competent, but is to be applied by you under instructions that the right to recover is limited to injury to improvements, and only as bearing upon that question, could testimony touching damages be received.

“Now, it may be natural to inquire how it can bear upon injury to improvements to hear what it will cost to take away a tree, or to dig down a slope, or to put up a wall.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio N.P. 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cincinnati-v-williams-ohctcomplhamilt-1882.