Shannahan v. City of Waterbury

28 A. 611, 63 Conn. 420, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 61
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 13, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 28 A. 611 (Shannahan v. City of Waterbury) 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
Shannahan v. City of Waterbury, 28 A. 611, 63 Conn. 420, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 61 (Colo. 1893).

Opinion

CARPENTER,, J.

In 1889 the city of Waterbury accepted the lay-out of an alteration and widening of one of its public streets known as South Riverside street. The improvement took the whole of a small wedge-shaped piece of land containing about twelve hundred square feet, with a building thereon standing. The damages assessed for such taking were $2,275. From that assessment an appeal was taken to the Superior Court. The case was referred to a committee. On the trial a question arose whether the damages should be assessed as of the time when the assessment was made by the common council, or as of the time of hearing before the committee. Damages were assessed in the alternative — $3,000 if the earlier day was adopted, and $3,500 if the later. The Superior Court accepted the report and rendered judgment for the higher sum. The defendant appealed to this court.

There is in effect but one error assigned, and that is the first. “ The court erred in not assessing the damages of the plaintiff according to the value of his land at the time when such land was taken for the public use.” The other two assignments are but a repetition of the first in another form. Another statement of the question before us is, when was the land taken for the public use ?

The city insists that it was taken when the assessments made by the common council became due, September 7 th,-1889. The plaintiff insists that it was taken when the judg *422 ment was rendered on the appeal by the Superior Court, May 31st, 1898. The Superior Court sustained the plaintiff’s. claim. In this we think tbe court erred.

The provisions of the charter bearing on this question are as follows : — Section 27 makes the city a highway district, and vests in it exclusive authority over the streets and highways therein, “ and exclusive power to lay out, make, or order new highways and streets within the limits of said city, and to alter, repair and discontinue all highways,” etc.

The court of common council is authorized to appoint a board of road commissioners, with power “ to lay out, construct or alter public squares, parks, highways, bridges or walks in said city, whenever ordered to do so by said court of common council.” Before proceeding to lay out or alter any street, etc., the 36th section requires said board to cause reasonable notice to be given to the owners of the land to appear before the board and show cause why the lay-out, etc., should not be made. Sec. 37 is as follows: — “ Whenever said board shall have decided to lay out any such square, park, street, highway, bridge or walk, or alteration thereof, they shall make a report in writing of their doings to said court of common council, which report shall embody a survey containing a particular description of such square, park, street, highway, walk, or alteration thereof; and whenever said report shall have been accepted by said court of common council, and recorded in the records of said city, and just compensation shall have been made to the persons whose property is to be taken for such public improvements, or shall have been deposited in the treasury of said city, to be paid to them when they shall apply for the same, in the manner hereinafter prescribed, then such square, park, street, highway, bridge or walk, or alteration thereof, and the land embraced thereby, shall be and remain taken and devoted to the public use for which it shall have been so laid out.” Sec. 38 provides for the assessment of damages and benefits to be made by the court of common council, or by a board of compensation by it appointed. It is then provided as follows: — “ Upon the completion of all their assessments (either for damages, or *423 damages and benefits, as the case may be), for any such square, park, street, or other public improvements, by said board of compensation, said board shall make a report of all their doings to said court of common council, and when such report shall have been accepted and recorded in the records of the proceedings of said court of common council, each and all of said assessments shall be legally deemed to have been made and done, and not before. Upon the completion by said court of common council of all their assessments for benefits in reference to any such square, park, street, or other public improvements, the doings of said court of common council shall be recorded; and when so recorded, each and all of said assessments by said court of common council shall be legally deemed to have been made and done, and not before.”

Thus it appears (when no appeal is taken) that the charter, in the 37th section, expressly provides that the time when the property condemned for public use shall be deemed to be taken is when the proceedings are duly recorded, and compensation is made or secured to the owners, which in the present case was September 7th, 1889, assuming that the payments had then been made or secured; that is, had not this appeal been taken, the time of taking the land for public use would clearly have been ou the day last named. That seems to be clear from an inspection of the charter, and requires no further argument.

The question now arises, how does the appeal affect this question? The charter answers the question. Section 41 provides that two classes of persons may appeal: First, any one aggrieved by any act of the city “ in reference to the laying out, constructing, altering or improving any square,” etc.; second, any one aggrieved by any act “ in making any of the assessments of damages and benefits authorized in this act.” There is a provision however that the appeal shall be taken within sixty days after the doing of the act of which he complains. The section concludes as follows : — “ No public square, park, street, highway, bridge or walk, or alteration thereof, laid out under the provisions of this act, shall *424 be opened or occupied by said city until the expiration of the time limited for the giving of notice to said city of such an application for relief; nor until all applications duly made as aforesaid for relief against acts done in reference to the laying out of such public improvements, shall be finally disposed of by said Superior Court.” Prohibiting the opening and occupying the improvement during the pendency of an appeal of one class implies a permission to open and occupy if the appeal is from the other class only. But the implication is unnecessary. For in an amendment to the charter, passed in 1878, sec. 1, it is expressly provided “ that in case of any appeal being made from the doings of the board of compensation * * * in making any assessment of damages or benefits * * * and no appeal is taken from the lay-out, nothing in said charter shall be construed to prevent said city from opening, occupying and working the same during the pen-dency of the appeal from the doings of said board.”

The question is not as to the taking of the plaintiff’s land alone, as the argument seems to assume, but is rather when was it determined to make the improvement and to take all the land necessary for that purpose ? The plaintiff’s ease cannot be separated from others whose lands were taken, but must be considered in connection with the others as one transaction; so that the question is, when was the improvement as a whole determined upon.

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

Related

Carl Roessler, Inc. v. Ives
239 A.2d 538 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1968)
Clark v. Cox
56 A.2d 512 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1947)
Mississippi State Highway Commission v. Treas
20 So. 2d 475 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1945)
Novogroski v. MacDonald
4 Conn. Super. Ct. 474 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1937)
Kaufman v. Valente
162 A. 693 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1932)
Woodward v. City of New Haven
140 A. 814 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1928)
Thomson v. City of New Haven
124 A. 247 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1924)
Ennis v. Baumann Rubber Co.
99 A. 1031 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1917)
Portland v. Tigard
129 P. 755 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1913)
Clark v. City of Portland
123 P. 708 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1912)
Newton Appeal From Board of Street Commissioners
79 A. 742 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1911)
Kelly v. City of Waterbury
76 A. 467 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1910)
Ettor v. City of Tacoma
106 P. 478 (Washington Supreme Court, 1910)
Bishop v. City of New Haven
72 A. 646 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1909)
Bohannan v. City of Stamford
67 A. 372 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1907)
New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad v. Long
37 A. 1070 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 A. 611, 63 Conn. 420, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shannahan-v-city-of-waterbury-conn-1893.