Prete v. Cray

141 A. 609, 49 R.I. 209, 59 A.L.R. 1241, 1928 R.I. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 25, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 141 A. 609 (Prete v. Cray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prete v. Cray, 141 A. 609, 49 R.I. 209, 59 A.L.R. 1241, 1928 R.I. LEXIS 41 (R.I. 1928).

Opinions

*210 Sweetland, C. J.

This is an action of trespass on the case brotight against the defendant as city treasurer of the city of Providence to recover damages for injury to the plaintiffs’ property alleged to have been caused by the action of the city in making an excavation in front of the plaintiffs’ land on Branch avenue in Providence for the purpose of repairing a public sewer.

The case was tried before a justice of the Superior Court sitting with a jury. The trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiffs in the sum of $2,020.83. The defendant duly filed a motion for new trial which was denied by the justice. The defendant has brought the case before us upon exception to.tbe decision of the justice on the motion for new trial and upon certain other exceptions of the defendant taken to rulings of the justice made in the course of the trial.

The declaration is in two counts. The first count alleges a breach on the part of the city of its duty to so conduct its work and support the sides of said excavation as not to disturb or remove the lateral support of the plaintiffs’ adjoining property. The second count alleges negligence on the part of the city and its agents in making the excava-' tion and performing the work of repairing the sewer causing injury to the plaintiffs’ property.

At the conclusion of the evidence the justice ruled that the plaintiffs had entirely failed to show negligence on the part of^the city and withdrew the second count from the consideration of the jury. To this ruling the plaintiffs, excepted but as the verdict was in their favor they have not brought the exception here and the question of whether the evidence tended to establish negligence in the city is not before us.

The defendant" is now insisting upon his exceptions to the ruling of the justice denying the motion to direct a verdict for the defendant and to the refusal of the justice to instruct *211 the jury in accordance with the defendant’s three requests to charge. Each of these four exceptions is based upon the defendant’s contention that in performing the work in question the city was exercising a governmental function and hence, in the absence of statutory provision imposing such liability, it is not liable for injury to the plaintiffs’ property caused by the disturbance or the removal of the lateral support of the plaintiffs’ land.

By a series of statutes Providence has been given authority to construct public sewers in the city streets and to make assessments for the cost thereof on the adjacent land. No duty to so construct sewers, however, has been imposed upon the city. It must be held that in availing itself of the privilege thus granted the city was not exercising a governmental function delegated to it by the State, but was voluntarily acting for its own advantage in its corporate capacity as a municipality. Upon this ground these exceptions should be overruled. Upon the application of a broader principle recognized by this court, however, -the defendant would be liable under the allegations of the first count of the declaration'which were amply supported by the plaintiffs’ evidence. When the city of Providence in the exercise of the power given to it to make excavations in the city streets for the purpose of constructing or - repairing sewers, goes beyond the lines of the .street and invades private property, even .if the invasion is only consequential, it stands in no different position from a private individual who invades the property of another individual. Under our decisions an owner’s property is invaded when its beneficial use is impaired in the manner alleged in the first count of the declaration as well as when such owner is directly and formally excluded from its enjoyment. Inman v. Tripp, 11 R. I. 520; O’Donnell v. White, 23 R. I. 318.

In his general charge the justice instructed the jury as follows: “If sand or soil of the plaintiffs’ land ran into the trench because of the digging operation the plaintiffs have been deprived of lateral support and are entitled to damages regardless of whether there is negligence or not.” To this *212 instruction the defendant has excepted and has relied upon that exception before us. The portion of the charge to which exception was taken appears by the transcript, to have been part of a sentence, the remainder of which is “if they did so act that because . . . they took away the lateral support of the land of the plaintiff then the plaintiff is entitled to damages.” This instruction is not objectionable as constituting an erroneous statement of the law. It is contended, however, that, as the plaintiffs’ claim of damage included damages to buildings upon their land as well as to the land itself, the charge was insufficient and misleading in that it failed to instruct the jury fully as to the measure of damages applicable in the circumstances of this case. If not satisfied with the charge in this regard the defendant should have asked for specific instructions and failing so to request the justice the defendant can not raise the objection here. Warner Sugar Refining Co. v. Metropolitan Grocery Co., 46 R. I. 158; Langley v. Woolworth Co., 47 R. I. 165; Cassidy v. McDonald, 47 R. I. 147. In the consideration of this exception, however, questions have arisen which make it desirable to consider the nature of, and the limitations upon the right of so-called lateral support between lands of adjoining owners, and also as to what is the measure of damages in case of an interference with that right. At the outset we hold that in this State if in the exercise of a privilege to construct or repair a sewer in a public street a municipality makes excavations therein it is subject to the same duty, not to interfere with the lateral support of land abutting on the street that the law imposes upon adjoining landowners. Between adjacent landowners the' general principle in this regard is that each has an absolute property right-to have his land laterally supported by the soil of liis neighbor 'and if either in excavating on his own premises so disturbs the lateral support of his neighbor’s land as to cause it, in its natural state, by the pressure of its own weight, to fall away or slide from its position the one so excavating is liable. This right of lateral support applies only to the land of the adjacent owner and does not include *213 the right to have the weight of the building ^placed upon the land also supported. And when, upon an excavation made on his own land by an adjoining landowner* a building upon the adjacent land by its weight and pressure causes the building itself and the land upon which it stands to sink, then in the absence of negligence the one making the excavation is not liable for injury to the building resulting from its subsidence.

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Bluebook (online)
141 A. 609, 49 R.I. 209, 59 A.L.R. 1241, 1928 R.I. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prete-v-cray-ri-1928.