Fyfe v. Turtle Creek Borough

22 Pa. Super. 292, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 206
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 12, 1903
DocketAppeal, No, 140
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 22 Pa. Super. 292 (Fyfe v. Turtle Creek Borough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fyfe v. Turtle Creek Borough, 22 Pa. Super. 292, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 206 (Pa. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Opinion byW.

W. D. Portee,

Wilbur avenue, in the borough of Turtle Creek, is located along a hillside. The plaintiff was the owner of a lot on the upper side of the street, and had thereon erected a house which was completed in 1897 and subsequently occupied by the owner as a dwelling. The borough authorities, in 1899, proceeded in a lawful manner to locate and construct a sewer along the avenue in front of plaintiff’s property. Immediately after the construction of the sewer the ground on the upper side began to slip; this movement was deep as the bottom of the sewer and extended into plaintiff’s lot so far that the dwelling house was seriously damaged. Viewers were appointed to assess the damages and benefits arising from the construction of the sewer [295]*295under the provisions of the Act of May 16,1891, P. L. 75; the plaintiff appealed from the award of the viewers and the defendant now assigns for error certain rulings of the court upon the jury trial. There was no evidence that the house of the plaintiff had been built upon made ground; the natural condition existed under the foundations. The contest in the court below involved the right of the plaintiff to recover for the injury to his building resulting from the construction of the sewer. The right of the plaintiff to recover in this action was limited to the damages arising from such injuries as were the direct, immediate and necessary or unavoidable consequences of the act of eminent domain itself, irrespective of care or negligence in the doing of it. For such injury a proceeding before viewers is the remedy provided by law. But for injury resulting from negligence in the performance of the work, the remedy must be by an action of trespass: Stork v. Philadelphia, 195 Pa. 101. Municipal authorities when adopting plans for or locating streets, sewers or other improvements, are vested with a discretion which the courts are without power to review, and in passing upon questions of benefits or damages, arising from the execution of the plan, evidence tending to show that sdme other plan might have been more beneficial or less injurious is not admissible. A claimant is not to be turned out of court merely because in the opinion of the viewers, the court or the jury, the municipality might have adopted a different plan, which would have served all useful purposes, and worked no injury to adjoining property. The injuries for which the municipality must answer in an action of trespass are those which result from negligence in the execution of the plan adopted: Chatham Street, 16 Pa. Superior Ct. 103.

The plaintiff presented evidence which if believed was sufficient to sustain a finding that the plan adopted by the borough could not have been executed upon that location without causing the injury to plaintiff’s building for which he sought to recover. The court could not in the face of this evidence declare as matter of law that the injury to the building “ was not the direct, unavoidable and necessary result of the construction of the sewer,” and defendant’s second prayer for instructions was properly refused. The learned* judge of the court below left this question to the jury with instructions which were too clear [296]*296and accurate to admit of misunderstanding. We must accept the verdict rendered under this charge as a distinct finding upon the questions of fact involved. The injury to the building did not result from the grading of the street, the natural condition of the ground, or any cause other than the construction of the sewer; that injury was the direct and necessary result of the construction of the sewer in accordance with the plan, was not caused by negligence on the part of the borough or the contractor in the execution of the work, and could not have been avoided by careful performance. The plaintiff could not upon this state of facts have recovered for the injury in an action of trespass against the borough : Pennsylvania Railroad Company v. Lippincott, 116 Pa. 472; McGrane v. Phila. & Reading Railway Company, 20 Pa. Superior Ct. 200. The first specification of error is overruled.

The second and third specifications of error involve the question of the right of the plaintiff to recover damages for the injury to his building resulting from the construction of the sewer. The argument of the appellant is that the injury resulted from the deprivation of lateral support caused by the cutting of the sewer through the natural stratification; that as between private individuals owning adjoining lands the damages recoverable, under like circumstances, are limited to the injury to the land in its natural condition, without regard to artificial improvements; and that the same rule must be applied hr ascertaining the damages recoverable from a corporation exercising the right of eminent domain. The right of lateral support, as between individual owners, is the right to have land in its natural state supported by the adjacent land. It is an incident to the land, a right of property necessarily and naturally attached to the soil. It is well settled that the right appertains only to the land, and not to buildings and other artificial improvements thereon erected. When an owner makes an excavation upon his land, in a manner free from negligence, and so deprives a neighbor’s property of lateral support, his liability for damages is limited to the injury to the land without regard to the buildings : Gilmore v. Driscoll, 122 Mass. 199; City of Quincy v. Jones, 76 Ill. 231; Transportation Company v. Chicago, 99 U. S. 635; McGettigan v. Potts, 149 Pa. 155; Matulys v. Phila. & Reading Coal & [297]*297Iron Co., 201 Pa. 70. The deprivation, by a private owner of an adjoining property, of lateral support is an unlawful act, which the court will restrain by injunction: Weir & Bell’s App., 81* Pa. 203. The owner of land which abuts upon a public street cannot be said to possess the right of lateral support, as against the commonwealth or its municipal agent, which regulates the highway, in the same sense in which that right is sustained between individual owners of land. The commonwealth, acting through the duly constituted authorities, may so lower the grade of a street as to deprive both land and buildings of lateral support, and the owner must submit. At common law such an injury was without remedy when no property was actually taken, and the owner was left without compensation: Green v. Borough of Reading, 9 Watts, 382; Henry v. Pittsburg & Allegheny Bridge Company, 8 W. & S. 85; O’Connor v. Pittsburg, 18 Pa. 187. The same rule prevailed with regard to the construction of sewers and other public improvements within the lines of the highway. The municipality, or its contractor, was liable in an action of trespass for an injury resulting from negligence in the manner of doing the work, but was exempt from liability for such injuries as were the necessary and unavoidable result of a careful execution of the plan. The hardship of this rule was recognized and commented upon with great force in O’Connor v. Pittsburg.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Pa. Super. 292, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fyfe-v-turtle-creek-borough-pasuperct-1903.