Fenton v. City of Seattle

231 P. 795, 132 Wash. 194, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 742
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1925
DocketNo. 18650. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 231 P. 795 (Fenton v. City of Seattle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fenton v. City of Seattle, 231 P. 795, 132 Wash. 194, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 742 (Wash. 1925).

Opinions

The plaintiffs Fenton and wife seek recovery of damages claimed as the result of injuries inflicted upon their lots 9 and 10, of block 36, Gilman's Addition to Seattle, by the city's alleged unreasonable *Page 195 and negligent establishing and physical construction of the original grade of the street upon which the lots front. A trial upon the merits in the superior court for King county sitting with a jury, resulted in verdict and judgment denying to the Fentons recovery in any sum, from which they have appealed to this court.

The claims of error necessary to here notice relate only to instructions given by the court to the jury. By their complaint the Fentons allege:

"That heretofore the city of Seattle has caused a grade to be established along said street so as to make a out of sixteen feet four inches along the property belonging to these defendants. That said grade as established is unreasonable. That said city has caused the said street to be graded and in making said grade it has removed the lateral support of said plaintiffs' premises so that the premises and the house situated thereon will slide into the street. That the manner of doing said work by the city is negligent and would necessarily cause damage to plaintiffs' property. That the negligence of the city consists in the following: The cut is too deep, the character of the soil is such that a slide must necessarily follow from said cut; that there is a light top soil and under this top soil is a stratum of clay and under this stratum of clay there is a stratum of blue clay; that all of such soil is of such character that through the action of the elements it will wash away. That the injury is a continuing injury and the damage a continuing damage. That defendant has actually invaded plaintiffs' property and taken a strip ranging from four to ten feet off their lots. That the value of lot 9, by reason of the premises, has been decreased in the sum of at least $2,000; and of lot 10 has been decreased in the sum of at least $800."

There was evidence introduced in behalf of the Fentons tending to show the following facts:

The lots lie upon a hillside above the street. Some ten to twelve feet below the surface of the lots they *Page 196 are underlaid with a stratum of blue clay of such nature as to cause the surface to settle and slide towards the street if their lateral support, consisting of the natural ground in the street, be removed to a depth of more than six or seven feet. The city excavated the street along the front line of the lots to a depth of some twelve feet or more, with a view of establishing the grade at that level. The surface of the lots then began to slide and settle, which caused injury to the dwelling house thereon. The city authorities, seeing their mistake in so attempting to establish and construct the grade, refilled against the front of the lots to a depth of several feet, with a view of making a slope down to the roadway across the parking for a distance of some thirty feet, but such refilling did not constitute an effectual lateral support as the natural condition of the ground in the street had done, evidently because such filling could not be made as solid as the natural ground had been. Just before the excavation of the street was made, Mrs. Fenton alone signed a paper requesting that the city make a vertical cut in front of the lots one foot back from the lot line. This she did with a view of building a retaining wall upon this one foot, three feet high, and then sloping the surface of the yard down to the top of the wall. She signed this paper at the request of the city authorities having the work in charge, and upon being informed by them that the cut at the front line of the lots was to be only six feet deep. Neither of the Fentons consented to any excavation of the street at the street line to any greater depth than six feet. An excavation of more than six feet at the front line of the lots was not necessary to the establishment and construction of a reasonable grade of the street. The evidence introduced in behalf of the Fentons tending to show these facts was in a considerable measure contradicted by *Page 197 the evidence introduced in behalf of the city. It is conceded that the evidence was sufficient to carry the case to the jury.

The trial court gave to the jury the following instruction:

"If you find from the evidence that the plaintiffs herein requested the city of Seattle to encroach upon their property and that the city by reason of said request did encroach upon the property according to the directions of the plaintiffs herein and by reason of such request, then such plaintiffs are not entitled to recover damages from the city of Seattle by reason of such encroachment. If you find from the evidence that the cityencroached upon plaintiffs' property without obtaining permissionof the plaintiffs herein to encroach thereupon, then suchencroachment is not a taking of the property, for the plaintiffshave the right to use such property thus encroached at theirpleasure. But if you find that such encroachment was a damage to the property and that such encroachment was made without the permission of the plaintiffs, then the measure of damages by reason of such encroachment, if a depreciation in the market value, is the difference between the cash market value of the property as a whole immediately preceding the encroachment and the fair cash market value of the property as a whole immediately subsequent thereto."

Counsel for the Fentons contend that the portion of this instruction which we have italicized was erroneous to their prejudice. The argument seems to be that, to whatever extent the city encroached upon the lots, it amounted to a taking of such portions of the lots as distinguished from the mere damaging of them. We think the evidence tends to show nothing more than a damaging of the lots by encroaching upon them in making the grade, as distinguished from a taking of any portion of them. There is nothing in this record or evidence warranting the assumption that the city was attempting to acquire or did acquire possession *Page 198 of or title to any portion of the lots; that is, the city's liability, if liable at all, was a liability for damage to the lots, and not a liability for taking any portion of them. InMilwaukee Terminal R. Co. v. Seattle, 86 Wn. 102,149 P. 644, where there was drawn in question the right of a property owner to compensation for the city's making a fill in the construction of a street so that the slope extended out and encroached upon the adjoining private property, Judge Crow, referring to § 16, art. I, of our constitution, giving property owners the right to compensation for the "taking" or "damaging" of their property for public use, speaking for the court, said:

"Where both terms are included, the word `damaged' should be held to cover injuries to property where there is no direct taking of the land itself; that is, where the owner is not deprived of title to any of the land, but where the land has been so injured or damaged as to cause a direct loss to the owner. In this case, appellant still owns the fee of the land over which the slope is to be constructed, and can convey the same, or make any use of it which it may desire, subject to the right of the city to maintain the slope."

Manifestly, all that the city has done here at most is to take away the lateral support. This may be a damage for which the Fentons are entitled to compensation, but it is not a taking of any portion of their lots. We think the instruction was not erroneous to their prejudice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 P. 795, 132 Wash. 194, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fenton-v-city-of-seattle-wash-1925.