Rogers v. City of New London

94 A. 364, 89 Conn. 343, 1915 Conn. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 10, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 94 A. 364 (Rogers v. City of New London) 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
Rogers v. City of New London, 94 A. 364, 89 Conn. 343, 1915 Conn. LEXIS 42 (Colo. 1915).

Opinion

Greene, J.

The plaintiff sued for damages resulting to her from a change of grade in the highway in front of her premises, the defendant city having neglected to cause damages and benefits to be ascertained in the statutory manner. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff for $50, and the plaintiff appealed to this court, assigning as errors various instructions to the jury in the charge, and two rulings on evidence.

*345 There is no merit in the first assignment of error, claiming that the court erred in instructing the jury that the action was brought “to recover the special damages which the plaintiff claims to have sustained over and above the special benefits, if any, which have accrued to her by reason of the changes.” Pickles v. Ansonia, 76 Conn. 278, 282, 283, 56 Atl. 552. The same is true of the second and third assignments, that the court erred in telling the jury that the question “whether or not the plaintiff has, or has not, suffered any special damage . . . may be stated in another way: what, if anything, is the difference between the actual market value of the plaintiff’s property before the acts of the defendant city and such value after those acts were completed”; and that in determining this question they “should take into consideration everything shown by the evidence as likely to affect that value, under such instructions as I shall give you, and which you may be permitted to consider under such instructions.” Platt v. Milford, 66 Conn. 320, 334, 34 Atl. 82; Cook v. Ansonia, 66 Conn. 413, 431, 34 Atl. 183.

There is no merit in the fourth assignment of error, which criticizes a statement of the right of the city to change the grade of highways, made in substantially the same language as that approved by this court in the case of Platt v. Milford, to be found in 66 Conn. 320, 323, 34 Atl. 82. The part of the charge objected to in the fifth assignment is correct, and closely follows both the law and the language of Platt v. Milford, limiting the plaintiff’s recovery to such a course of conduct as a prudent owner would take with his property.

In the parts of the charge objected to by the sixth and seventh assignments of error, the court instructs the jury that the plaintiff can recover only for damages caused by the change of grade that has been made, and not for possible future damages to result from *346 possible future changes of grade. Such an instruction is so patently correct that the plaintiff would probably not object to it were it not for the practical application of the doctrine made by the court in other portions of the charge objécted to in assignments eighth, eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth.

There was evidence (Finding, paragraph 49 ei seq.), which was not questioned, tending to show that, about twelve years before the change of grade complained of, the defendant lowered the grade of the carriageway, and, at the change of grade in 1912, lowered the grade of such part of the land in the highway and outside of the carriageway as it thought proper for sidewalk purposes, but not up to the plaintiff’s property line, there being left at the old grade, between the part lowered and the plaintiff’s line, a strip varying in width from five inches to three feet; these measurements being agreed to by the parties. The defendant cut away the earth in 1912 in this manner to lower the grade of the sidewalk to correspond to the grade to which the carriageway had previously been brought. There was on the plaintiff’s property line a retaining-wall, outside of which was said strip of earth of from five inches to three feet in thickness. Before the change of grade of the sidewalk, the plaintiff had a flight of steps, used to pass to and fro between her premises and the sidewalk, the bottom one of which came to her property line. The. lowering of the sidewalk left the bottom of these steps above the new grade, and the defendant constructed for the plaintiff’s benefit three more steps, prolonging the former flight down to the new sidewalk grade. These three steps were within the highway, but came only to the line, farthest from plaintiff’s land, of said strip of earth left between the lowered sidewalk and plaintiff’s property line, and in nowise interfered with public travel.

*347 The court, in the eighth assignment of error, told the jury that the plaintiff might, if consistent with prudent management, make a proper slope for said strip of earth within the highway limits, and either turf such bank next the new sidewalk, or simply put in a low wall adjoining the walk, to hold such bank in position, and that then the cost of making such changes and the remaining diminution, if any, in the market value of the plaintiff’s property would together represent the special damages which the plaintiff has sustained. The plaintiff objects to this instruction because it excludes from the territory as to which the plaintiff can. now recover damages the strip of land which the defendant left in the highway between plaintiff’s property line and the outer edge of the new sidewalk. The defendant claims that the change of grade to be considered by the jury in assessing damages is only the change actually made. The plaintiff claims that the change of grade, in contemplation of law, extends to the plaintiff’s property line. The difference in result would be that, on defendant’s theory, the plaintiff can now recover only such damages as actually result from such change as has been actually made, and if, at any future time, the defendant reduce the grade up to the plaintiff’s line by removing said strip or bank of earth, then the plaintiff would be entitled to such further damages as would result from such future change of grade. On plaintiff’s theory, on the other hand, plaintiff must recover now for whatever change has been made, or may hereafter be made, up to plaintiff’s property line.

To change the grade of part of the width of a highway, leaving the rest unchanged, is a change of grade for which damages may, if they are caused, be recovered. In this street the grade of the carriageway was lowered in about 1900, but that did not give the plaintiff a *348 right then to recover for the damages caused her by the subsequent change of grade of the sidewalk in 1912, nor prevent her from recovering damages resulting from the lowering of the sidewalk grade after it had been lowered. If the grade is changed in a part, causing damage, damages may be recovered for the change in that part, though the rest be unchanged. “To change their grade [sidewalks] is to change in part that of the highway, although in other respects it may be left unaltered.” McG ar v. Bristol, 71 Conn. 652, 655, 42 Atl. 1000.

The city, in lowering the grade of a part of the land within the highway limits to reduce the sidewalk to a grade conformable to that of the carriageway, was under no duty to so lower the grade of all the land between the carriageway and the outer limit of the highway. There might be a greater width than was useful for sidewalk purposes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 A. 364, 89 Conn. 343, 1915 Conn. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-city-of-new-london-conn-1915.