Slaughter v. Meridian Light & Railway Co.

48 So. 6, 95 Miss. 251
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 48 So. 6 (Slaughter v. Meridian Light & Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slaughter v. Meridian Light & Railway Co., 48 So. 6, 95 Miss. 251 (Mich. 1909).

Opinions

Mayes, J.,

delivered the first opinion of the court, the oneafterwards withdrawn.

During the year 1906 the Meridian Light & Railway Company obtained from the municipal authorities of the city of Meridian the right to construct and operate a street railway line on certain streets in tho city of Meridian, one of the streets being Twelfth avenue. This avenue is only forty feet wide from property line to property line. The sidewalk on one side is-eight feet wide, and the sidewalk on the other side is nine feet wide, leaving a space for the street proper of twenty-three feet, down the center of which the railway company has placed its line. When a car is in operation it occupies a space of eight feet in the center of the street, leaving a space of six feet and two inches between the outer edge of the car and the curb. The standard-guage wagon is about six feet from outer edge to outer edge of hub, according to the testimony, leaving only about two inches of space between the cár and ’wagon when passing on the street. It is true that it is shown by the testimony that the city ordinances permit only an eight foot sidewalk on avenues of this character and width; but this cannot alter the principle in this case. Mrs. Slaughter owns an entire block abutting this street, except about seventy-two feet owned by another party; Mrs. Slaughter’s frontage being about two hundred seventeen feet on .this avenue. On the 12th day of July, 1906, Mrs. Slaughter filed a bill in the chancery court seeking to restrain the railway [268]*268company from operating its road on Twelfth avenue until they had compensated her for the damage done her property by the operation of the street railway, and, further, for damage claimed because of certain excavations made by the company in placing their line on the avenue.

The property in question had formerly belonged to the mother of Mrs. Slaughter; but, the mother having been killed by a cyclone some time in March, 1906, Mrs. Slaughter had inherited the property and was sole owner. The record shows that there were various protests entered against the placing of this railway on the avenue by the different owners of the property before the track was- placed in the street, so that no question •of waiver or estoppel is presented in any way. The narrowness of the street makes it difficult and almost impossible for a vehicle to be in the street at the same time with the car, and the street is rendered much less available for ordinary traffic since the •occupation of the street by the railroad company. Of this there can be no doubt. The testimony fails to show that Mrs. Slaughter was damaged by any excavations made by the railroad company, and the chancellor so found as a fact, and we think correctly. If Mrs. Slaughter is damaged by any excavations, such excavations as produced the damage were made by the city, and not the railway company. But the testimony shows that by the maintenance and operation of this railway the property of Mrs. Slaughter is depreciated in value in a sum variously estimated at from $500 to $1,250. On the hearing the chancellor adjudged that Mrs. Slaughter was not entitled to recover, and dismissed the bill, from which judgment an appeal is prosecuted to this court.

The sole question presented by this record is whether or not a street railway and its maintenance and operation may be said to be one of the legitimate uses of a street, in contemplation of the parties at the time of the original taking, so as not to impose an additional burden on the street when afterwards placed there, .and precluding abutting property owners from claiming addi[269]*269tional damage ? If such has been tbe rule heretofore, does not sec. 17 of tbe Constitution of 1890 change tbe rule? Tbe question in this case is presented to this court for decision for tbe first time. We have before us tbe bolding of all tbe courts on this subject, and in addition to this we also have what many of tbe courts did not have at tbe date they were called on to decide this question; that is, we have a fully developed system of street railways, and tbe relation of tbe street railway to tbe public and its effect on the value of property adjacent to it can now be seen in all its aspects. It 'is undoubtedly true that tbe great weight of' earlier authority is in favor of tbe bolding that tbe abutting property owner is not entitled to additional compensation when the street is subjected to street railway uses after tbe original taking, and that such a use does not. impose an additional servitude on a street; but it is not to be forgotten that many of tbe decisions so bolding were made at a time when street railways were not in common use, and under Constitutions that provided compensation only for tbe taking of property, and not for consequential damage, as does our Constitution.

In order to properly understand this question, it will be necessary to review to a limited extent tbe history of street railways and tbe decisions bearing upon this subject. Tbe first street railway of which we have any history was constructed by one John Stephenson in 1831 in tbe city of New York. This venture proved a failure from a commercial standpoint, and in a short while was abandoned. Tbe enterprise was again resumed in 1845, and from this date it may be said that this system of street traffic became firmly established. Tbe first street railway was operated in Boston in 1856, in Philadelphia in 1857, and in New Orleans in 1861. Tbe first electric street railway was constructed in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1884. It is thus seen that tbe street railway as now in use in nearly all tbe cities is a thing of modern origin. Tbe common law cannot be resorted to, to ascertain whether or not such uses of tbe street can be said to have been within tbe contemplation of tbe parties at tbe time of tbe [270]*270taking, because there is no common law on the subject. Each state must form its own jurisprudence on this subject, and the question must be determined under its own Constitution and laws.

It was a known fact that under the Constitution of 1869, providing for compensation to the owner of property for public use, the property owner often suffered damage as a consequence of the taking for which there could be no' recovery. When the constitutional convention met in 1890 a more liberal and just rule was established, in that by sec. 17 it was provided that the property owner should be compensated for both the taking and for damaging. Under this section of the Constitution individual rights are guarded completely, and it is now impossible for an individual to suffer damage to his property rights through public uses without full compensation. No narrow construction should ever be given to this clause of the Constitution, adopted, as it was, to more fully secure individual right.

The first construction of this section of the Constitution was in the case of Vicksburg v. Herman, 72 Miss. 211, 16 South. 434. Herman owned certain lots in the city of Vicksburg fronting on Belmont and Monroe streets. These streets had originally been dedicated to public use and a grade established thereon. Subsequently a new grade was established by the city; and in so doing the property of Herman was damaged as a consequence. The streets in question had originally been used by the public, and the change in grade was merely for the purpose of improving the street and making it more available for public uses.

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Bluebook (online)
48 So. 6, 95 Miss. 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slaughter-v-meridian-light-railway-co-miss-1909.