Court Opinion

ID: 6423379
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:01:51.385642+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:52.600786
License: Public Domain

Devens, J.
The decision of several of the exceptions to the rulings of the presiding judge depends upon the inquiry whether the petitioner received any sufficient notice to remove his “trees, fences, and other property ” which might obstruct the building of the way, and whether, if he failed so to remove them, he is to be deemed to have relinquished his right thereto for the benefit of the town. Pub. Sts. c. 49, §§ 80, 81. While no distinct ruling on these points appears by the bill of exceptions, the trial was evidently conducted upon the theory that there had been no such notice, or certainly no such relinquishment; and that the petitioner was entitled to have the jury consider, in determining the value of the land taken from him and the injury done to the remaining land, that certain trees and stones in a certain fence were actually taken and used in the widening, and that the corner of a house owned by the petitioner projected into the proposed way, so that he would be compelled to remove the same, if such was a reasonable mode of managing his property, or otherwise sustain the injury done by cutting it off.
While the damages sustained by a landowner, a part of whose land is taken for the widening or construction of a town way, are to be assessed and awarded upon the same principles as provided “for the assessment and award of damages by county commissioners in laying out highways,” (Pub. Sts. c. 49, § 68,) the mode of laying out or widening the same is different. In laying out a highway by the county commissioners, their order states the time allowed an owner to remove his property from the land taken, and no further notice to him is necessary. Murray v. Norfolk, 149 Mass. 328. But a town way is laid out primarily by a vote of the town, after a determination to that effect is made by the selectmen or road commissioners of the town, and reported to it. Pub. Sts. c. 49, § 71. Provision is made for appeal to the county commissioners, in the ease of selectmen *37unreasonably refusing to lay out town ways, or of the town unreasonably refusing to accept the same. §§ 73, 74. When such a way is laid out, the selectmen are, in their report or return, to specify the manner in which it shall be completed, transmit to the clerk a description of the location and bounds thereof, to be by him recorded; “ and they shall allow the owner of the land through which the way passes a reasonable time to take off his trees, fences, and other property which may obstruct the building of such way.” § 80. Neglect to remove such property within the time allowed is treated as a relinquishment of the same for the benefit of the town, except in regard to buildings or materials on the land, as to which a different provision is made. §§ 17, 80. It is contemplated by § 80 that the adjudication as to the u reasonable time ” to be allowed to the owner will form a portion of the report of the selectmen, so that, when accepted by the vote of the town, the order will be complete, as in the case of the county commissioners, who make such adjudication a part of their order. Nor is there any difficulty in this, as, even if it is uncertain when the report will be accepted by the town, it would ordinarily be done by providing that the time should be so many days after the acceptance thereof.
The report of the selectmen by which Liberty Street was widened was made on October 10, 1887, and was accepted on October 19, 1887. No provision was made in it for any time within which the trees, fences, and other property should be removed. On October 29, 1887, a notice from the selectmen was served on the petitioner, which stated that in their laying out, which was accepted on October 19, 1887, they had allowed to each of the owners of the land through which the way passed twenty days after the acceptance thereof to take off all trees, fences, and other property. In preparing this notice, the selectmen evidently had not i'e-examined their laying out of Liberty Street, which contains no such provision. As the laying out of Wall Street, which was accepted the same day, does contain a similar provision, it is quite probable that it was omitted by inadvertence. Whether the functions of the selectmen as a public body authorized to lay out town ways subject to acceptance of the town, are so far terminated on such acceptance that they cannot thereafter adjudicate what *38is a reasonable time for the removal of property, and give a binding notice thereof, we have no occasion to consider. If they have such authority, a notice based on an erroneous recital of the laying out, and not purporting to be in itself an adjudication on this point, cannot be sufficient to subject the owner to the serious consequences which must follow neglect of it.
Nor do we think such an effect can be given to the notice of November 14, 1887. This related only to the building and materials, which had not been specified in the previous notice of October 29, which mentioned only “ trees, fences, and other property.” By the Pub. Sts. e. 49, § 17, which are applicable in the case of town ways, if the owner of any building or materials neglects to remove them after reasonable notice, the commissioners or selectmen may take such care of them as safety demands, may remove the same on adjoining land of the adjoining owner,’ or may sell the same at public auction, etc. This notice repeats, in a somewhat different form, the erroneous statement that the selectmen had allowed in their laying out twenty days to the owner after the acceptance by the town “ to remove the buildings and materials on such land so taken,” and notifies the petitioner that, the twenty days having expired, unless within five days he removes the buildings and materials, the selectmen and highway surveyors of the town will “ take care of, remove, or sell such buildings and material,” according to the provisions of the Pub. Sts. c. 49, §§ 17, 80.
It was held in Murray v. Norfolk, ubi supra, that the property specified in the Pub. Sts. e. 49, § 17, was not included in § 9 of the same chapter, which specifies “ timber, wood, or trees,” and provides that they shall be deemed to be relinquished if not removed within the time limited, and that a different rule was prescribed for the artificial structures erected on the land, and their materials. In the case of such structures, the value of the property is intended to be carefully preserved to the landholder, and the provisions in relation thereto are so inconsistent with those of § 9 that they cannot be applied to the same property. For the same reason, property specified in the Pub. Sts. e. 49, § 17, is not included in § 80 of the same chapter, where the phrase used is “ trees, fences, and other property.” If the notice had been properly given, and the petitioner had failed to *39remove his building within the reasonable time fixed by it, his building would not have been deemed to be relinquished, which is the rule in regard to “ trees, fences, and other property.” The selectmen would simply have been empowered to deal with them under the authority given by § 17. Under the notice as to the building, however, no action whatever has been taken by the selectmen.
It is suggested that, as the petitioner has elected to proceed under the statute, he cannot now object that the proceedings as to the laying out, or the notices, were irregular. It is true that the petitioner cannot object that there was no lawful laying out, and thus that the defendants are to be treated as trespassers. Foley v. Haverhill, 144 Mass. 352. Murray v. Norfolk, 149 Mass. 328. The petitioner does not seek to do this. He recognizes the laying out as valid. His contention is only that in this matter the respondent, or the selectmen who acted in its behalf, have not taken those steps which were necessary to deprive him of his right to damages, or to put him in such a situation as to be deemed to have relinquished his property.
Assuming that the notices given by the selectmen cannot have such an effect, we proceed to consider whether the respondent has any just ground of exception to the ruling of the presiding judge in the matter of damages. The jury were instructed, that, in determining the amount of pecuniary damage or loss suffered by the petitioner, they should ascertain the value of the land taken, and the damage, if any, to the petitioner’s remaining land; and that against these should be set off such special benefit, if any, as the petitioner had received by the widening, not shared in by the community in general. The nature of such special benefit, and what would constitute the same, were defined, and the jury were cautioned not to allow any evidence of items bearing upon the question of damages to withdraw their attention from this general principle. To these instructions no exception was taken.
The respondent objects, however, that in determining the injury to the plaintiff the jury were allowed to consider certain items which they should not have been allowed to treat as bearing upon it. It contends that they should not have been allowed to consider the value of the trees, or of the stones which formed *40a portion of the wall. As these were destroyed or used by tho respondent, unless it could be deemed that they were relinquished, — and we must hold otherwise where no proper notices were given, — there is no reason why these values should not be included in the estimate of the damages. There was a dispute whether the stones in the fence were mere loose stones, hastily thrown together, and, under the instruction, the petitioner was not permitted to recover for them unless they constituted a wall, and were “ a part of the real estate,’’ and were thus covered by the petition. The value of the stones taken and trees destroyed, and thus appropriated to public use, bore directly on the question of the indemnity the petitioner was entitled to receive.
Nor has the respondent any ground of objection to the rule of damages as given in regard to the house, a portion of whicli would be cut off when the widening took place unless it were removed. The jury were instructed to inquire whether it was a proper mode, in the management of the property, to remove the house, or to repair the end cut off, and that the expense of removal was an element of damage if it was a reasonable and proper thing to remove the building under all the circumstances of the case. We do not understand that the respondent makes any objection to these instructions, except that they are precisely what should have been given if there had been no notices. As we have held that the notices were ineffectual for the purpose of enabling the respondent to treat the petitioner’s property as relinquished, or of depriving him of his right to remove his building, they do not require discussion. Nor has the respondent any ground of complaint because of the ruling of the court which permitted the jury to consider whether it would be necessary to fence the land after the strip taken by the respondent was thrown into the widening. In connection with the general principle that the property was to be treated in a reasonable manner, and as a prudent man would do, they were permitted to consider, under the circumstances, whether there was any necessity of fencing which could properly be considered an element of damage. To have instructed, as matter of law, in conformity with the request of the respondent, that damages could only be allowed to the amount of the fence destroyed, *41would have been obviously wrong; as it may be, even if no fence, or one of far less value, would have been necessary before the widening, that a more valuable one would be required thereafter. Commonwealth v. Coombs, 2 Mass. 489, 492. First Parish in North Bridgewater v. Plymouth, 8 Cush. 475. Stone v. Heath, 135 Mass. 561.
The grade of Liberty Street, on which the petitioner’s land was situated, had never been established by any order, but there had been no change in it as the street was used. The street, as worked, was rounded off from its crown towards the petitioner’s land, and there had been a path along the side of it lower than the crown of the street, which had been used by foot passengers when dry, and had served as a gutter in wet weather. The petitioner’s land ran back from this, nearly on a level. There being no regular sidewalk, the grade at the northerly line of the street, next the petitioner’s land, was about the same as that of his land. After the widening, while the crown of the street was not changed, a sidewalk was built on the land taken, the grade of which was about fifteen or sixteen inches higher than the petitioner’s remaining land, although the sidewalk itself was not higher than the crown of the street. The petitioner was permitted to introduce evidence, against the objection of the respondent, of the cost of grading his land as high as the grade of the sidewalk, and extending back therefrom in a regular slope, as an element of damage/, and the jury were instructed, in accordance with the request of the petitioner, but subject to the general principle which the court had announced as one by which they should bfe guided throughout, that “ if the highway known as Liberty Street had, previous to the present widening, since its first laying out, been used and occupied by the public, along the side next to the petitioner’s land, at the same grade as the adjoining land of the petitioner, and without any sidewalk except such as had been created by the path along that side of the street which the public had used, this petitioner is entitled to recover for all damages arising from the construction of a sidewalk upon the land taken from this petitioner along the line of the petitioner’s remaining land, and for the raising of the level of the sidewalk constructed upon the land taken from him above the grade of the petitioner’s land, if such raising and construe*42tion is a part of the actual work of widening of said street under that taking.” That the construction of the sidewalk and raising the grade of the land taken would injuriously affect the relation which the remaining land bore to the highway, is probable, and the jury might consider whether grading up the remaining land was a proper mode of meeting the difficulty. The respondent contends that it had the right to construct a similar sidewalk within the limits of the highway as it formerly existed; that this would have made the same difference in grade between it and the petitioner’s land; and that the petitioner would be entitled to recover a less sum as grade damages if the sidewalk was merely extended seven feet in width on his land, than he would if the respondent, having no right to build a sidewalk up to the grade of the crown of the street within its old limits, had, by building a sidewalk on the land taken, raised the grade of the sidewalk fifteen or sixteen inches above the petitioner’s land, as in the one instance there would be a change of grade, in the other none. The respondent has no right to assume that it could have erected a sidewalk within the original limits, which would have had the effect of injuring the petitioner’s remaining land by leaving it at a lower grade than the sidewalk, without paying damages therefor. The Pub. Sts. c. 52, § 15, give to the owner of land adjoining a highway or town way a remedy for any damage sustained “ in his property by reason of any raising, lowering, or other act done for the purpose of repairing such way and had such a sidewalk been erected within the original limits of the way after it had been constructed and prepared for travel, the owner of the land could have maintained his claim for compensation. Burr v. Leicester, 121 Mass. 241, 242. The proceedings in the case at bar are not, it is true, under the Pub. Sts. c. 52, § 15, as the respondent urges; but the existence of that statute shows that the theory that the respondent might change the grade by erecting the sidewalk within the original limits, without paying damages therefor, is erroneous. Again, whatever might be the rule as to damages for a change of grade within the original limits of the way, when, as a part of the actual work of widening the street, and of its construction, a sidewalk is made upon the land taken from the petitioner, and raised above the remaining land to its injury, it is a proper *43element of damage to be considered by the jury. It was held in Fall River Print Works v. Fall River, 110 Mass. 428, that, in an assessment of damages to land by widening or altering a street, the petitioner could recover for damages occasioned by raising the level of a sidewalk, if such raising was part of the actual work of widening the street. The construction of a sidewalk, if a part of the actual work of widening, would certainly not be less a matter to be considered in the assessment of damages, than the raising of a sidewalk already in existence. To this effect was the instruction.
The petitioner contended that the respondent could not set off, as against his damages, any benefit the widening of the street might have been to his land, except the widening by the width of the seven feet taken from his own land; and', to support this contention, offered evidence that the public had, for twenty years and more, used the sidewalk next to Mrs. Carpenter’s land, (which was also taken, and was opposite that of the petitioner,) and had thereby gained a right to that land to be used as a sidewalk by prescription. To the admission of this evidence the respondent excepted. It appeared that this land of Mrs. Carpenter had formerly been uninclosed, but that she had, before the widening, erected a fence extending the whole length of the premises, opposite the petitioner’s land, seven feet southerly from the southerly line of Liberty Street, which the petitioner claimed to have been erected for a period of more than twenty years, although this was controverted by the respondent.
The court instructed the jury, “ that, if you find this sidewalk before the widening was in use by the public continuously and regularly as a part of said highway for a period of twenty years or more, that throws that portion of the land open to the public, as part of the public street.” The respondent urges, that this use may have been permissive, and not under a claim of right, and adverse; or it may even have been against the notice and objection of the owner of the land; and that thei'efore the instruction was defective. It is more than probable, that, as actually given to the jury, this instruction was amplified, and that the meaning of the words “ in use by the public continuously and regularly as a part of said highway,” was fully explained. *44Under this instruction, we cannot suppose that the jury could have inferred that a permissive use, or one interrupted and not continuous, would have the effect of making the strip a part of the highway. The respondent called no attention to any deficiency in it, nor does it appear to have excepted to the instruction, although it did to the admission of the evidence. This evidence was certainly competent, as it bore directly upon the question whether the public had gained a right of way by prescription over the strip of Mrs. Carpenter’s land taken for the widening and used as a sidewalk. That a highway may be established by prescription in the same way that it could be before the St. of 1846, c. 203, and that this statute relates only to ways by dedication, which cannot thus be established except after a formal laying out in the manner prescribed, has been often decided. Jennings v. Tisbury, 5 Gray, 73. Commonwealth v. Coupe, 128 Mass. 63. McKenna v. Boston, 131 Mass. 143. Veale v. Boston, 135 Mass. 187. “ Since that statute, as well as before,” says Chief Justice Morton in Veale v. Boston, “a way may be proved by long and continued use and enjoyment by the public, upon the ground that a conclusive presumption arises from such use that it has been established by competent authority. And the cases before cited decide that such a use, continued for twenty years, proves a way by prescription, so as to render a city or town in which it is situated liable to keep it in repair.” The respondent also contends, that, even if the town had gained a right in this strip of land of Mrs. Carpenter by prescription, it was lost when, in October, 1887, the town accepted the selectmen’s report, which recognized the old line of the street as contended for by the respondent, and established the new line, by which the very land in which the petitioner contended that the public had gained a prescriptive right was taken, and for which Mrs. Carpenter was awarded damages. The respondent therefore urges, that, as damages were to be assessed at the time of taking the petitioner’s land, at that time the public had no right in this land. ISTo such question as this was raised at the trial, or presented to the presiding judge. It would not be profitable to consider whether, if it had been, it would have affected the case.
The petitioner asked that the jury should extend the time within which he should be allowed to remove his building. *45We have no doubt of the right of the petitioner, under § 17, to remove his building, even after the time assigned for its removal had expired, if at that time no action had been taken. We are not, however, prepared to hold that the authority given to a jury by the Pub, Sts. c. 49, § 81, to extend the time for the landowner to remove his “ trees, fences, and other property,” applies to buildings. While these words are used in § 80, buildings and materials are excepted expressly therefrom in that section ; and the provision of § 81, by which a failure to remove within the extended time is to be deemed a relinquishment, shows that it is applicable to property other than buildings and materials. We have already stated our reasons for holding that buildings and materials included in § 17 are not included either in § 9 or in § 80. The careful provision that is made in § 17 for the preservation of their value to the owner, if they are not removed within the time notified, renders it much less impoi'tant that there should be an extension of time than in those cases where a failure to remove would operate as a relinquishment of the property. While this portion of the verdict was erroneously rendered, it is readily separable from the other, and judgment can be rendered on the latter for the plaintiff. This being done, the entry will be,
JExceptions overruled.