State Highway Commission v. Ralston
This text of 359 P.2d 529 (State Highway Commission v. Ralston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The highway commission appeals from a judgment in an action to condemn right of way for highway widening in connection with the overhead crossing at the junction of Slavin Road (Bertha-Beaverton Road) and Barbur Boulevard in Multnomah County.
Error is assigned to the giving of an instruction which permitted the jury to consider loss of access to the landowner’s property in the determination of damages. The landowner had no access to Barbur Boulevard before it was widened and none thereafter. He attempts to justify the giving of the challenged instruction by arguing that even though he had no access to Barbur Boulevard before the improvement, the value of his property was diminished by the change in traffic flow on Slavin Road which admittedly resulted from the elimination of a nearby grade crossing and the construction of an overhead-freeway crossing.
It is too well settled for argument that a property owner may not recover damages where the sovereign, in exercise of the police power, reroutes, increases, or decreases the flow of traffic on a public highway. Public regulation is not a taking. State Highway Com. v. Burk et al, 200 Or 211, 230, 265 P2d 783, and authorities therein cited.
There are other assignments of error, but' the challenged rulings are not likely to occur upon another trial, and need not be considered.
Reversed and remanded.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
359 P.2d 529, 226 Or. 143, 1961 Ore. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-highway-commission-v-ralston-or-1961.