Park City Yacht Club v. City of Bridgeport

82 A. 1035, 85 Conn. 366, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 135
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 9, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 82 A. 1035 (Park City Yacht Club v. City of Bridgeport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Park City Yacht Club v. City of Bridgeport, 82 A. 1035, 85 Conn. 366, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 135 (Colo. 1912).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

The record in this case when before this court upon a former occasion (81 Conn. 76, 70 Atl. 631) contains a statement of facts substantially similar to those of the present record, by which it appears that:—

The plaintiff is a yacht club, owning and occupying a clubhouse upon the south side of Stratford Avenue in Bridgeport and on the easterly bank of an arm of the harbor, which was crossed by Stratford Avenue by means of a solid stone causeway. Acting under its charter and the various votes and orders of its common council, committees, and boards, all of which appear in detail in the opinion in that case, the city tore down, in 1901 and 1902, the part of this causeway just west of plaintiff’s premises and north of the present roadway in front of said premises, and laid out a highway and constructed a bridge north of the causeway, being parallel with said causeway but much higher in grade and having a high and immovable raffing along its south side and extending one hundred and fifty feet east of the entrance to the clubhouse. South of the bridge is a gap of water twenty-three feet wide, .left by the tearing out of the causeway. The traveled way remaining over the old causeway is only twenty-four feet wide. The plaintiff’s property is thus left, as a result of this improvement, on a cul-de-sac.

The former finding did not state directly whether or not the improvement ordered by the city contemplated a construction such as that in fact made. The present finding sets forth in detail the history of the building of the bridge and of the changes actúally made, as evidence received to show that at and before the layout and appraisal the city contemplated the construction of *369 the bridge and the physical changes in front of plaintiff’s premises, and finally it sets forth the ultimate fact that this “was contemplated by the city before the said layout and appraisal.” The court reserved the question whether the history and facts showing what use the city contemplated making of Stratford Avenue as widened should have been excluded.

Two principal questions have been urged in argument : (1) That the Superior Court could not in this proceeding consider the effect upon the plaintiff’s property of the physical changes proved. (2) That the damages suffered by the plaintiff by reason of these physical changes and by reason of diversion of travel are not recoverable.

In the former opinion we held (p. 80) that “the application alleges, in substance, that the improvement in question, namely, the layout, alteration, exchange, discontinuance, and enlargement of Stratford Avenue, contemplated such a construction and working of the highway established in place of the one previously existing, that the plaintiff would be largely shut off from free and direct access from its adjoining property to the main traveled path of the highway,” and that “the application appears to have been tried to the court upon the denial of these allegations.”

The opinion recites the proof of physical changes made by the city subsequent to the confirmation of the assessment which accorded with the contemplated changes as alleged in the application, and says (p. 82): “The finding does not state directly whether or not the court found to be true the allegation of the complaint, that the improvement ordered by the city contemplated a construction such as that proved upon the trial. It would perhaps appear from the memorandum of decision that the fact alleged was a fair inference from the facts proved.”

*370 Upon the application and facts found, the trial judge had held that “the only question open upon this proceeding is the effect of the widening of Stratford Avenue,” and that in consequence of this ruling “he did not in fact estimate the effect of said changes, other than the widening of said highway, upon the value of the appellant’s property.” The basis of the ruling was that the scope of the application was limited by the vote of the common council to the widening of Stratford Avenue, and hence other physical changes were not elements of damage to be considered in this proceeding. This was the important question involved in the appeal reported in 81 Conn. 76, and was the most strongly argued of the questions presented on this reservation.

After reciting the various provisions of the charter and the proceedings thereunder, we say in our former opinion (pp. 78, 83): “This action of the common council contemplated a layout of the public improvement previously resolved upon by the common council, by which. Stratford Avenue was altered, exchanged, discontinued and enlarged, as set forth in the report. . . . And in this case that improvement, as established in front of the plaintiff’s premises, was a highway involving an alteration, extension, and practical discontinuance for public use of portions of a previously existing highway.”

We held this public improvement was of a very peculiar nature, and under this application, based, as it must , have been, upon the action of the common council in instituting the improvement as contemplated by the city, the Superior Court was “bound to consider any injurious effect upon the value of the plaintiff’s property which might result from the contemplated, peculiar, construction of the highway, as well as any beneficial effect which might result from other causes, in determining whether or not the whole effect of the *371 improvement was to specially benefit the plaintiff,” and that “the provisions of the charter do not so limit, the jurisdiction of the court.”

We thus held that, under this application, all physical changes contemplated by the improvement should have been considered by the trial court, and that the record-showed by inference that these physical changes had been contemplated by the improvement. Because of this we held the error of the trial court harmful. That no objection had been made to the proof of these physical changes was unimportant. We held them to be relevant and material to this action, otherwise we should not have deemed the failure of the trial court to consider them erroneous.

This action is a retrial of the same application, with a denial of the allegations of physical changes contemplated by the city.

The material facts found are the same as on the former trial, with the addition of facts showing the history of the improvement, and that the city contemplated the construction and physical changes which we said was perhaps “a fair inference from the facts proved.” As we have seen, we held that the Superior Court had jurisdiction in this proceeding to consider the effect of all of said physical changes upon the plaintiff’s property. The former decision upon this point must be accepted as the law of this case. It follows that all of this evidence was properly received.

One other question is reserved which was not specifically included in our former decision: Whether, in assessing damages, the diversion of travel from passing the plaintiff’s premises is an element to be considered. As an abutting owner, the plaintiff has a special and peculiar interest in the street fronting his premises. Cullen v. New York, N. H. & H. R. Co., 66 Conn. 211, 226, 33 Atl. 910. We have spoken of these rights col *372

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Bluebook (online)
82 A. 1035, 85 Conn. 366, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/park-city-yacht-club-v-city-of-bridgeport-conn-1912.