Hot Springs R. R. v. Williamson

45 Ark. 429
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 45 Ark. 429 (Hot Springs R. R. v. Williamson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hot Springs R. R. v. Williamson, 45 Ark. 429 (Ark. 1885).

Opinion

Cockrill, C. J.

Congress granted a right of way to the Hot Springs Railroad Company by act of March 3, 1877, through the Hot Springs reservation. The road was located and built through the city of Hot Springs, along the line of Benton street, the right of way occupying one hundred feet on the south side of it. This right of way lacked 130 feet of extending to the intersection of Malvern avenue, which is the western terminus of Benton street. On June 16, 1880, the United States, through congress, ceded to the city of Hot Springs the streets and other thoroughfares of the city, for public use, and thereafter the city by an appropriate ordinance granted the railroad company a right of way from its western terminus through Benton street to the intersection of Malvern avenue. The company extended its road-bed upon this additional right of way, making for that purpose an embankment in the street, fifty feet wide and from three to four feet above the grade of the street; the center thereof being in a direct line with the center of the congressional right of way. The sides of the embankment are of masonry, presenting solid granite walls, and preventing any use whatever by the public of so much of the street as is occupied by it.

The appellee is the owner of the premises on the two corners, next to the railroad, of Benton street and Malvern avenue. The lots on the north side of the street, front--feet on Malvern avenue and — feet on Benton street, the others 105 feet on Benton street and fifty-four feet on Malvern avenue. The embankment occupies a space between the two pieces of property, leaving twenty-five feet of open street between it and the premises on the south side of the street and sixty-five feet between it and the premises on the north side. The proof showed that the extension of the road-bed was elevated above the grade of the street in order to bring the new tracks upon a level with the old ; that the south side of the street, just east of the appellee’s premises on that side, was blockaded by the appellant’s turn-table placed within its congressional right of way, so that the embankment not only narrowed the street next to these premises, but also made it necessary for the appellee to take a circuitous route around the west end of it, in order to gain access to her premises on the south side of the street when approaching from the east, and that these facts depreciated the value of the premises on both sides of the street. The appellee sued the company lor this injury and recovered, judgment for $225$.

The company requested the court to instruct the jury as follows, viz:

railroads:— ?efsToUpnvate premises.

“ The streets and alleys were ceded by congress to the city of Hot Springs for the use of the public, and if the city with sanc^0I1 0f legislature) grants a railroad company the right to construct and operate its road thereon, such company will not be liable to an abutting owner for consequential damages, unless it results from the negligent and improper construction of the road. It is not alleged in this case that the defendant’s road is negligently or improperly constructed. Therefore, if you find that the city of Hot Springs, by one or more ordinances adopted prior to the 1st day of March, 18.83, ' granted defendant the right of way upon Benton street, between plaintiff’s lots, and that the embankment and other structures complained of, or any of them, are located thereon, you will not find for the plaintiff by reason of damages caused to their lots by said embankment and such improvements.”

The court refused this, and charged the jury that the appellee was entitled to x’ecover the amount her property was diminished in value if the facts were found as stated. The counsel for the appellant submits that this action of the court raises this question :• “ Where the fee of the streets is in the city, and it grants a right of way to a railroad company to construct its road along a street, pursuant to an act of the legislature authorizing such use of the street, and the track is laid in a proper and skilful manner, is the corporation liable for consequential damages to abutting lot owners ?”

The cases sustaining the position assumed by the appellant have arisen mainly under the familiar constitutional restriction that private property shall not be taken for public use without compensation; and the decisions have generally turned upon what is a taking of property within the meaning of this provision. When the title of an owner of real estate, abutting upon a street which is appropriated in whole or in part by a railroad, extends to the center of the street, the cases concur in sustaining his right to recover not only for the fee in the street, which is actually taken, but also for the consequential damages done his. abutting premises. But when the fee to the street is in the public, and the legislature, having no. other restraint laid upon it, has sanctioned its use by a railroad, the weight of authority is that the abutting owner of real estate can recover nothing unless the corpus of his premises is actually invaded in some way. In other words, if an inconsiderable part of his estate is taken the owner may recover the incidental damage done to the whole; but he can recover nothing, even though the incidental damage to his estate be equally great, if nothing is taken. When this rule was promulgated the kind of consequential injuries here complained of had, perhaps, no existence. Now, the consequential injury may amount to an absolute destruction of value, and to make the right of recovery dependent upon the ownership of the fee in a street, in which the owner’s practical interest at last is only that of a servitude, is to make a difference with only a narrow legal distinction to back it. Many judges, while adhering to the rule, have condemned the practical injustice of .it, and have commended a change to the law-making power. ■ •

Our Constitution, adopted in the light of the injustice that may result from an enforcement of the rule, has placed an additional limitation upon the right of eminent domain. The bill of rights does not stop at a simple prohibition against the taking of private property for public use without compensation. To this guaranty, which was found in the Constitution of 1868, the framers of the Constitution of 1874 added another, to wit: that private .property .shall not be damaged for public, use without compensation, and now the fundamental law is,, “.private property shall not be taken, appropriated or damaged, for public'use without just compensation.” Under this enlarged provision, our inquiry is no lopger limited to the question, has private property been taken for public use, and it is useless to recur to cases which are confined to the interpretation of a clause containing that limitation only. A provision similar to that in our Constitution is found in the constitutions of Illinois, Colorado, Georgia, Nebraska, California, West Virginia and Pennsylvania, and in each of these states it has been held by the courts of last resort that this addition to the old provision against taking private property without compensation was intended to afford redress where none could be had before. Pusey v. City of Allegheny, 98 Pa. St., 522; City of Reading v. Althouse, 93 Ib., 400; Reardon v. San Francisco, 7 A. & E. Cor. Cases, 454; Harman v. Omaha, Ib., 474; Gottschalk v. R. R., 14 Nebraska, 550; R. R. v. Fellers, 16 Ib., 169; Rigney v. Chicago, 102 Ill., 64; Atlanta v. Green, 67 Ga., 386; Denver v. Boyer, Col,, 23 Am. Law Reg., 440; Molandin v. M. P. R’y, 14 Fed.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Ark. 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hot-springs-r-r-v-williamson-ark-1885.