Dana v. Rock Creek Railway Co.

7 App. D.C. 482, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 3087
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 1896
DocketNo. 506
StatusPublished

This text of 7 App. D.C. 482 (Dana v. Rock Creek Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dana v. Rock Creek Railway Co., 7 App. D.C. 482, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 3087 (D.C. Cir. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Morris

delivered the opinion of the Court:

On behalf of the defendant it was contended in the court below, and it is now contended here, that the plaintiff’s case is one of damnum absque injuria, as it is called — a remote, incidental, or consequential injury, for which the law gives no redress. From the conceded facts in the case it is clear beyond all possibility of doubt that this conclusion is not just, and if it is not just we cannot think that it is law. [489]*489If it is to be held as law, it must be, not because it is the dictate of reason — for it is not — but in consequence of such weight of authority as must be absolutely binding upon us and constituting a rulé of construction for our guidance. We do not find any such weight of authority, or any sufficient authority to justify the conclusion which we are asked to adopt.

In view of the. decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Smith v. Corporation of Washington, 20 How. 135, notwithstanding that some more recent decisions do not seem to be entirely in accord there-” with, it may be conceded that the District of Columbia as a municipality has the right to grade the streets and roads within its limits, and such grades to alter at its pleasure whenever, in the judgment of its Commissioners, it is proper so to do for the public interest, without thereby incurring liability to private owners of adjacent property which may be injured by the change or alteration. It may also be admitted that Congress has the right to grant to railroad companies the privilege' of using the streets and highways of the District of Columbia, and to prescribe the mode in which the use shall be exercised. But it does not follow from these propositions that a railroad company authorized by law to lay its tracks in a street or road dedicated to the public use and necessary to the owners of adjoining land for the purpose of access to their property and egress therefrom, may so use or occupy such street-or road as to render difficult or impossible the access of such owners to their lands, and thereby to destroy or impair the value of the lands, without liability for compensation to the owners. Nor does it follow that, without such liability, the grade of a street or road once established and satisfactory to the municipality and the public for all their public purposes, may be altered by a railroad company to suit its own exclusive purposes, to the injury of the adjacent property. On the contrary, we regard the rule as well established and abundantly supported by authority, that there is [490]*490a marked distinction in this regard between the liability of a municipality in the construction of its highways for its public purposes and the liability of private corporations using the same highways under legitimate authority for their own private purposes and their own emolument.

It is very true,.as contended, that the general purpose of a railway company is to a certain extent a public purpose. The company exercises a public franchise; and its existence is justified only by the public convenience.' But it does not Tor that reason cease to be a private corporation; nor do its tracks, although laid in the public highway, cease to be its own private property. Often in the case of steam railways, the public are wholly excluded from all use of such portions of the highway as are occupied by the tracks ; and even in the case of urban and suburban railroads, operated by horses, cable, or electricity, the railroad companies owning them are usually given the right of way, and to the extent of their use of the tracks, the public are equally excluded from them. In other words, to the extent of the use made of it by the railway company, the highway practically becomes private property of the company. The use is a private use for private emolument, justified only by the fact that it greatly subserves the public convenience.

Now, whatever may be the extent of the authority of the municipality to proceed without liability to the adjacent owners in the use of the public thoroughfares for public purposes, it cannot be that either the municipality itself or the legislative authority can confer rights upon a private corporation, or upon a private individual, in derogation of the public right, and not in pursuance of it, that would justify such private corporation or individual in the invasion of the private rights of others, and constitute an exemption from liability.

In accordance, as it is stated, with the great principle of the common law and of Christian morality, which requires that one should so use one’s own property as not to injure [491]*491others, the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Co. v. Fifth Baptist Church, 108 U. S. 317, speaking by Mr. Justice Field, held that a railroad company had no right to convert even its own private property into a nuisance injurious to adjacent owners and destructive of the value of their property. There is even less warrant for the conversion of the public highway into such a nuisance. For, in the present instance, the railway company appears to have converted the street into a trench, which it does not otherwise use for its own purposes or for any legitimate purpose, and which it does not permit the adjacent owners to use, and from which the adjacent owners are effectually barred.

In the noted case of Story v. New York Elevated Railroad Co., 90 N. Y. 122, it was held that when a street, whether the fee be in the municipality, in the public, or in the adjacent owners, has once been taken and dedicated for the purposes of a street, no structure can be authorized upon it which is inconsistent with the continued use thereof as a public open street, without compensation to the adjacent owners. And the same doctrine was reaffirmed in the case of Mahady v. Bushwick Railroad Co., 91 N. Y. 148. Assuredly, the construction of such a structure as the New York Elevated Railway could not be more injurious to the adjacent owners, or more inconsistent with the continued use of the street as an open public highway, than would be the absolute destruction of a street as it stood and its conversion into a trench preventing access to the adjacent property, merely for the private benefit of a private corporation.

In the case of Peddicord v. Baltimore, Catonsville and Ellicott's Mills Railroad Co., 34 Md. 463, 483, it was said by the Court of Appeals of Maryland:

“ As in the cases referred to in 6 Wheaton and 20 Howard, a municipal corporation, having the power to grade streets, does not exhaust its power by one or more acts of grading, but may continue its acts and change the grades, so often as the public convenience may demand, and the [492]*492property holder acquires no right to new compensation for every change. But it is another question when the municipality, not requiring the change of grade for the public convenience, may grant to a private corporation a right to lay tracks on its streets, and that corporation may undertake to change the grade for its own advantage, though it may be with the consent of the municipal corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
7 App. D.C. 482, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 3087, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dana-v-rock-creek-railway-co-cadc-1896.