City of Quincy v. Jones

76 Ill. 231
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 76 Ill. 231 (City of Quincy v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Quincy v. Jones, 76 Ill. 231 (Ill. 1875).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The several errors assigned upon the rulings of the court below, present, in our opinion, but two material questions:

First. Are municipal corporations, while acting within the scope of their municipal authority in making excavations in streets for the purpose of opening or improving them, liable to property owners for injuries to buildings erected on lots abutting on the streets, resulting from the removal of the lateral support of the soil in the streets?

Second. Does the owner of a city Jot, abutting on a public street, acquire a prescriptive right to have the buildings and structures on such lot sustained by the lateral support of the soil in the street, by the mere failure of the city to remove the soil within such time as would, in a proper ease, afford evidence of a prescriptive right against an individual?

In Nevins v. Peoria, 41 Ill. 507, which was an action on the case for negligence in grading a street, whereby the flow of water was diverted from its natural channel, and thrown on the plaintiff’s property, this general principle, equally applicable.to the present case, was announced :

“ The city is the owner of the streets, and the legislature has given it power to grade them, but it has no more power over them than an individual has over his land, and it can not, under the specious plea of public convenience, be permitted to exercise that dominion to the injury of another’s property, in a mode that would render a private individual responsible in damages, without being responsible itself.”

In support of the rulings of the court below, defendants in error insist- that it is a well settled rule of law, that the owner of land has a right to have the soil of his premises sustained by the lateral support of the natural soil of the adjoining land, and they cite Humphries v. Brogden, 12 Q. B. 743; Thurston v. Hancock, 12 Mass. 229; Farrand v. Marshall, 21 Barb. 409; Rolle’s Abr. 665. An examination of these author-4 ities, however, will show that this right of lateral support is limited to the soil in its natural state, and that it does not extend to the support of any additional weight which the owner of the soil may place upon it.

The reference found in Bolle is this:

“If A be seized in fee of land next adjoining the land of B, and A erect a new house on the confines of his land next adjoining the land of B, and if B afterwards dig his land so near the foundation of A’s house, but no part of the land of A, that thereby the foundation of the house and the house itself fall into the pit, yet no action lies by A against B, because it was A’s own fault that he built his house so near to B’s land, for he, by his act, can not hinder B from making the best use of his own land that he can. But semble, that a man who has land next adjoining my land, can not dig his land so near mine, that thereby my land shall go into his pit; and, therefore, if the action had been brought for that, it would lie.”

The facts in Thurston v. Hancock, were, briefly, these: In 1802, the plaintiff purchased a lot upon Beacon Hill, in the city of Boston, and in 1804 built a valuable house on it within two feet of his line. In 1811 the defendant became the owner of the adjoining lot, and began to dig down the hill, and had dug within five or six feet of the plaintiff’s lot, when the earth gave way and exposed the foundations of plaintiff’s house, and he had to take it down. The court held that the plaintiff was without remedy for the injury to his house, saying: “A man, in digging upon his own land, is to have regard to the position of his neighbor’s land, and the probable consequences to his neighbor. If he digs too near his line, and if he disturbs the natural state of the soil, he shall answer in damages; but he is answerable only for the natural and necessary consequence of his act, and not for the value of a house put upon, or near, the line by his neighbor. For in so placing the house, the neighbor was in fault, and ought to have taken better care of his interests. * * * He built at his peril, for it was not possible for him, merely by building upon his own ground, to deprive the other party of such use of his as he should deem most advantageous. * * For the loss of or injury to the soil merely, his action may be maintained. The defendants should have anticipated the consequences of digging so near the line, and they are answer-. able for the direct consequential damage to the - plaintiff, although not for the adventitious damages arising from putting his house in a dangerous position.”

Humphries v. Brogden, was an action for injury to plaintiff’s land by the removal of the minerals under the surface, so that the land subsided, cracked, and was materially injured. Lord Campbell, after reviewing the English cases upon the subject, among other things, said: “Where there are separate freeholds, from the surface of the lands and the minerals belonging to different owners, we are of the opinion that the owner of the surface, while unincumbered, by buildings, and in its natural state, is entitled to have it supported by the subjacent mineral strata.”

Farrand v. Marshall simply decides, that a man may dig on his own land, but not so near that of his neighbor as to cause the land of the latter to fall into the pit, and is not in conflict with the rule that the owner of a building, in the absence of a grant or prescriptive right, is not entitled to have it sustained by the lateral support of his neighbor’s soil. After a somewhat extended and careful examination, we have been unable to find any serious conflict in the decisions, either English or American, on this particular question, and, therefore, deem it necessary to refer to but a few additional cases in its further elucidation.

In Panton v. Holland, 17 Johns. 92, plaintiff was the owner of a house and lot in the city of New York, and the defendant, in erecting a house on an adjacent lot, in order to lay the foundation, dug some distance below the foundation of the plaintiff’s house, in consequence of which one of the corners of the plaintiff’s house settled, the walls were cracked, and the house, in other respects, injured. It was held that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, unless on the ground of negligence in the defendant in not taking reasonable care to prevent the injury.

In Lasala v. Holbrook, 4 Paige, 169, complainants were seized of certain lots in the city of New York, on which was a church, erected many years before the filing of the bill. The defendant was the owner of an adjoining lot, and commenced the erection of a building which was intended to cover the whole lot, and to be six stories high. He was sinking the foundations of the building sixteen feet below the natural surface of the ground, and ten feet lower than the foundation of the church. It was claimed that, by excavating the lot in this manner, the defendant would greatly endanger the church; that one corner of the walls thereof, opposite which the excavation had been completed, had settled so as to leave a crack in the wall, and it was prayed that the defendant be enjoined from making the excavation.

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Bluebook (online)
76 Ill. 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-quincy-v-jones-ill-1875.