Pinney v. Borough of Winsted

66 A. 337, 79 Conn. 606, 1907 Conn. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 10, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 66 A. 337 (Pinney v. Borough of Winsted) 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
Pinney v. Borough of Winsted, 66 A. 337, 79 Conn. 606, 1907 Conn. LEXIS 90 (Colo. 1907).

Opinion

Hall, J.

The complaint contains in substance these allegations: The plaintiff Augusta C. Pinney, wife of the plaintiff Lucien V. Pinney, has for many years been the owner of a tract of land in the borough of Winsted and town of Winchester, bounded northerly on land of Lucien Y. Pinney, easterly on land of F. B. Catlin, southerly on Main Street, and westerly on Union Street. On the 26th *608 of July, 1902, the warden and burgesses of said borough gave due notice to the plaintiffs to show cause at a fixed time and place why Main Street should not be widened, not exceeding six feet, for the purpose of widening the sidewalk on the northerly side thereof, not exceeding six feet, in front of the plaintiffs’ premises, and to show cause why not exceeding six feet of the plaintiffs’ land fronting the northerly side of Main Street should not be appropriated for that purpose. The warden and burgesses met on the day fixed, and made report that they “-had widened said highway and said sidewalk and laid out the same for said widening by taking the strip of land on ‘ Main Street included between the southerly side of said'Augusta C. Pinney’s lot and the extension westerly to Union Street, in a straight line of the present northerly line of the sidewalk on the northerly line of said Main Street in front of F. B. Gatlin’s lot, said F. B. Catlin’slot being on the easterly side of the said Pinney’s lot.’ ” Said strip is described in said report as follows: “ Beginning in the line between the lots of F. B. Catlin and Augusta and Lucien V. Pinney, at a point about 50 r%% feet distant westerly from the southwest corner of F. B. Catlin’s block, 27* feet distant from the southwest corner of F. B. Catlin’s house, and 24*% feet from the southeast corner of said Pinney’s house on the northerly side of said Main street; thence S. 6° 57' IF. 5* feet in said (The words in italics, which appear in the report of the committee to the Superior Court, were apparently omitted by mistake in the description in this report) line between Catlin and Pinney to said Pinney’s southerly line ; thence N. 86° W. in said Pinney’s southerly line 52* feet to easterly line of Union Street; thence in said easterly line of Union Street N. 16° 14' E. 4x¥o feet to a point distant 28x5* feet from the southwest corner of said Pinney’s house and 37xo-o- feet from the southeast corner of J. H. Alvord’s block; thence S. 86° 51' E. 51*% feet to place of beginning; containing 250 square feet ”; and that they were unable to agree as to the damages sus *609 tained by the plaintiffs by reason of such taking. Upon the application of the warden and burgesses a committee' was afterward duly appointed by a judge of the Superior Court “ to estimate and assess the benefits and damages accruing to the plaintiffs by reason of taking of said piece of land,” who reported in writing to the Superior Court that having fully heard the parties and viewed the premises, they estimated and assessed to Augusta C. Pinney the damages “ caused by the widening and extending of said highway, sidewalk, and street, and the taking of said land as aforesaid, at the sum of ” $350, and that there were no benefits. (Said report contained the same description of the land for the taking of which such damages were assessed, so far as it is material to the questions involved in this’ case, as is given above in the report of the warden and burgesses). Said report was duly accepted by the Superior Court, and said sum of $350 was paid to the plaintiff Augusta C. Pinney. The strip of land thus condemned runs through the above described premises of the plaintiffs, and they are the owners of a strip of land on the southerly side of said condemned strip, and between it and the highway, about eleven feet in width, and extending the whole length of the southerly line of the plaintiffs’ premises. After the acceptance of said report and the payment of the damages so assessed, the warden and burgesses notified the plaintiffs that the width, course, grade, and curb line of the sidewalk in front of their premises had been established ; that the sidewalk was to be 8-1 feet wide, the northerly or inside line of the same being the northerly line of the condemned strip above described, and directed the plaintiffs to lay a walk upon said sidewalk and to set a curb along the southerly line thereof, so established in front of their premises, from their easterly line to Union Street, for the purpose of allowing the town of Winchester to extend its highway across the plaintiffs’ premises outside of said curb line, and notified the plaintiffs that unless they complied with said order on or before a day fixed the borough authorities would lay such sidewalk and *610 set said curb; and that if said work should be done by .the borough the expense thereby incurred would become a lien upon the plaintiffs’ property. If the sidewalk and curb should be constructed and set as above described, the sidewalk would include not only the strip of land condemned as above stated, but also a strip of land belonging to the plaintiffs, extending along the south side of the condemned strip, being about 3rü“¡r feet in width at its east end and 4rihr feet in width at its west end; and also a strip of land belonging to the plaintiffs, extending along the south side of said curb line, about 7fi>o feet at its east end and 6rVo feet at its west end, would be thrown into the traveled highway, and that the plaintiffs would be thus deprived of said two strips of land, although they had not been condemned, and although the plaintiffs have not been compensated therefor, and that the plaintiffs were willing to lay a sidewalk upon said condemned strip.

The following diagram will illustrate the plaintiffs’ claims as they appear to be stated in the complaint.

The trial court having found that the town of Winchester ought to be made a party to the case, upon the motion of *611 the borough ordered said town to be summoned in as a codefendant, and said town appeared and pleaded as hereinafter stated.

The temporary injunction granted at the commencement of the action was afterward, upon motion of the defendant borough, modified by the judge who had granted it-so as to permit the laying of the sidewalk and the setting of the curb by the borough in the manner ordered, but with the provision that the rights of the parties should in no way be prejudiced by such modification.

To this complaint, asking for an injunction restraining the defendant borough from laying the walk and curb as ordered, and for damages, each of the defendants demurred.

Among the grounds of demurrer filed by the borough are these : (1) That it appears by the condemnation and appraisal proceedings that the southerly boundary of the strip condemned, and for the taking of which the plaintiffs had been paid damages, was the southern boundary line of the plaintiffs’ land, and that the plaintiffs could therefore own no land south of the condemned strip. (2) That by the condemnation and appraisal proceedings it was adjudicated that the plaintiffs were not the owners, and were not entitled to damages for the taking, of the land claimed by the plaintiff south of the condemned strip, or of any land between Main Street and the southerly line of the condemned strip.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Robinson v. Saul
D. Alaska, 2020
Bird Peak Road Ass'n v. Bird Peak Corp.
771 A.2d 260 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2001)
Texas Co. v. Slosberg
152 A. 152 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1930)
Barri v. Schwarz Bros. Co.
107 A. 3 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 A. 337, 79 Conn. 606, 1907 Conn. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinney-v-borough-of-winsted-conn-1907.