A party cannot take exception to a ruling under which a trial
has been conducted by his procurement or with his acquiescence.
In an action by the owner of a building and land abutting on a
street in the City of New York against a company which had
constructed an elevated railroad and stationhouse over and along
the street, the plaintiff claimed damages for the injury to the use
and enjoyment of his property by obstructing the passage of light
and air and diminishing the rents, and also for the permanent
injury to the market and rental value of the property. Evidence
offered by the plaintiff of the value of the building before and
after the construction of the railroad was excluded by the court
upon the defendant's objection. The defendant contended that the
plaintiff's damages should be limited to the date of bringing the
action. But the court ruled that they might be recovered to the
time of the trial, and evidence was introduced in accordance with
that ruling without objection or exception by the defendant to the
admission of the evidence or to the ruling under which it came in.
Held that the defendant could not except to a subsequent
refusal of the court to admit evidence that the value of the
plaintiff's property had been increased by the construction of the
railroad, nor to an instruction allowing damages to be recovered to
the time of trial, nor to the refusal of an instruction, requested
by the defendant after the charge, that the recovery could be had
only for the permanent injury to the plaintiff's property.
Page 135 U. S. 433
An abutter on a street in the City of New York may recover
against a company constructing an elevated railroad and
stationhouse in front of his building damages for the discomforts
and inconveniences in the occupation of the building caused by the
erection of the defendant's structure, independently of the running
of trains thereon.
This was an action brought March 5, 1880, by a national bank
against an elevated railroad company to recover damages for the
construction of the defendant's track and stationhouse in front of
the plaintiff's banking house at the southwestern corner of Third
Avenue and Twenty-third Street in the City of New York.
The complaint claimed damages for the interference with the use,
enjoyment and value of the plaintiff's building and the obstruction
of light and air by the construction of the defendant's track and
station, and for the interference with the use, comfort and
enjoyment of the building by the plaintiff, its officers, servants
and tenants, caused by the noise, steam, smoke and noxious smells
attending the running of the trains, and for the consequent
lessening of the rents and profits of the building, and also for
the permanent injury to the use of the building and to its market
and rental value, by the construction of the track and station, and
by the jarring and concussion attending the running of the
trains.
The answer denied that the plaintiff had any interest in Third
Avenue and Twenty-third Street except as shared with the public at
large; denied the other allegations of the complaint, except that
it admitted the erection of the elevated railway and station, and
alleged that these structures were authorized by and in conformity
with the statutes of New York of 1850, c. 140; 1866, c. 697; 1867,
c. 489; 1868, c. 855; 1875, cc. 595, 606.
A verdict recovered by the plaintiff at a trial in February,
1885, was set aside and a new trial ordered. 24 F. 114.
At the second trial in June, 1886, it appeared that Third Avenue
and Twenty-third Street were laid out many years ago under the
statute of New York of 1813, c. 86, § 178, by which the city
acquired the title in fee of public streets,
Page 135 U. S. 434
avenues, places, and squares,
"in trust, nevertheless, that the same be appropriated and kept
open for and as part of a public street, avenue, square, or place
forever, in like manner as the other public streets, avenues,
squares, and places in the said city are, and of right ought to
be;"
that the plaintiff bought its land and erected its building in
1874; that the building was four stories high, with business
offices in the basement, the plaintiff's banking house in the first
story, and apartments let to tenants in the stories above; and that
the defendant, under and in conformity with the authority conferred
upon it by the statutes of New York, constructed in 1878, and had
since maintained, a railway track over and along Third Avenue,
fifteen feet above the surface of the street, and fifteen feet
wide, supported by iron columns, and the west side of the track
being about thirty-five feet from the west side of Third Avenue;
and also a stationhouse, with stairs leading to and from it, at the
intersection of Third Avenue and TwentyThird Street; and that
locomotive engines and trains constantly passed over the track in
front of the plaintiff's building. The plaintiff's cashier, called
as a witness in his behalf, testified, without objection by the
defendant, that the track and station obstructed the access of
light to and the circulation of air in the bank on the first story,
and the apartments on the second story, and compelled the plaintiff
to use gas by day in the bank, and that this effect continued to
the time of the trial.
He also testified, without objection, that "the structure, as it
existed there -- the elevated railway station and the platform and
the bed of the road" -- reduced the rents of the building. He was
then asked: "How much a year?" The defendant's counsel interposed,
and asked for "an election on the part of the counsel for the
plaintiff as to whether in this action they are claiming for loss
of rents, or for injury in consequence of the erection of the
road." The court declined to require the plaintiff's counsel to
make an election, but directed them to confine themselves to
proving, in any proper way, that the structure as a permanent
thing, without regard to the running of trains upon it, injured the
plaintiff's building. The cashier thereupon
Page 135 U. S. 435
testified, without objection by the defendant, that there had
been a loss in rents of $1,000 a year since the structure had been
there and down to the time of trial.
The plaintiff offered to prove the value of the building before
and after the defendant's elevated railroad was built. This
evidence was objected to by the defendant and excluded by the
court. Thereupon the following colloquy took place:
"Defendant's Counsel. You only come down to the commencement of
this action, I suppose? I will ask counsel to make a determination
of what he is going for. I suppose I have a right to ask for an
election at this point."
"The Court. For what length of time do you claim to
recover?"
"Plaintiff's Counsel. We claim for permanent injury."
"The Court. If you are entitled to recover, you claim damages
should be assessed by the jury until now?"
"Plaintiff's Counsel. No, sir; but until as long as grass grows
and water runs."
"The Court. Maybe they will take it down; if they should, then
you would not want to pay back anything. But you claim the right to
recover prospectively. Counsel is entitled to know what you claim.
I think the common law is, as I stated it, that where there is a
consequential injury resulting from damages, the damages may be
recovered up to the time of the trial, and if they continue the
right of recovery continues also. I think I will go by the common
law, unless I see to the contrary before the trial closes."
Other witnesses were afterwards called and examined by both
parties, without objection, as to the diminution of the light, air,
and rental of the building from the time of the erection of the
defendant's structures to the time of the trial, and as to the
causes of such diminution.
Evidence that the value of the plaintiff's property had
increased since the erection of this railroad structure was offered
by the defendant and objected to by the plaintiff. The court
sustained the objection, and excluded the evidence, and the
defendant excepted.
At the close of the evidence, the court denied successive
Page 135 U. S. 436
motions of the defendant to direct a verdict for the defendant,
because no facts had been shown sufficient to constitute a cause of
action, and to direct the jury to render a verdict for the
plaintiff for nominal damages only, and the defendant excepted to
the denial of each of these motions.
The court instructed the jury that the plaintiff, having erected
its building after Third Avenue and TwentyThird Street had been
laid out as public streets, had the right to have those streets
remain forever as open streets, and that if the structure erected
by the defendant was such a permanent thing in the way of either
street, as an open street, as to make it cease to be an open
street, or cease in a measure to be an open street, and so to
subvert it from an open street into something else at that place,
the plaintiff was entitled to recover "such damages as it has
sustained by reason of the erection of this structure, which has
subverted the street, from the time it was put up until now,"
taking into consideration the injury to the part of the building
occupied as a bank, by hindering access to and egress from it and
by obstructing the admission of light and the circulation of air,
and including not only an allowance for the expense caused by being
compelled to use gas, but a fair compensation for other discomforts
and inconveniences in its occupation in consequence of the
defendant's structure and also any diminution of the rents of the
rest of the building by reason of the defendant's permanent
structure standing there in the two streets, but that no damages
were
"to be given on account of any inconvenience occasioned by the
noise of the running of trains, or smoke, or cinders, or steam, or
gas, or any of those things connected with the running of the
trains."
The defendant excepted to the instruction that the plaintiff
should be allowed such damages as it had sustained by the reason of
the defendant's structure up to the present time, and also to that
part of the charge which allowed a recovery for discomforts and
inconveniences, other than being compelled to use gas, in so much
of the building as was occupied by the bank.
The defendant, at the end of the charge to the jury,
requested
Page 135 U. S. 437
the court to instruct them as follows:
"The plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this action for
loss of rents or of rental value. The recovery in this action, if
at all, must be for permanent injury to the plaintiff's property by
the defendant's interference with the easement of light and
air."
The court refused so to instruct the jury, and the defendant
excepted to the refusal.
The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of
$5,000. A motion by the defendant for a new trial was overruled by
the court. 24 Blatchford 89, 28 F. 231. Judgment was thereupon
entered for the plaintiff for the sum of $5,068.33, being the
amount of the verdict and interest, and the defendant sued out this
writ of error, which the plaintiff unsuccessfully moved to dismiss
for want of a sufficient amount in dispute to give this court
jurisdiction.
118 U. S. 118 U.S.
608.
Page 135 U. S. 440
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the facts as above, delivered
the opinion of the Court.
The law of the state of New York, as declared by the Court of
Appeals, appears to be as follows: an elevated railroad erected in
and over a street pursuant to the statutes of the state, and with
due compensation to the owners of property taken for the purpose,
is a lawful structure. The owners of lands abutting on a street in
the city of New York have an easement of way, and of light and air,
over it, and, through a bill in equity for an injunction, may
recover of the elevated railroad company full compensation for the
permanent injury to this easement, but in an action at law cannot,
without the defendant's acquiescence, recover permanent damages
measured by the diminution in value of their property, but can
recover such temporary damages only as they have sustained to the
time of commencing the action.
In re New York Elevated
Railroad, 70 N.Y. 327;
In re Gilbert Elevated
Railway,
Page 135 U. S. 441
70 N.Y. 361;
Story v. New York Elevated Railroad, 90
N.Y. 122;
Lahr v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway, 104 N.Y.
268;
Pond v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway, 112 N.Y. 186.
This rule of damages at law has not prevailed in analogous cases
decided in other jurisdictions and collected in the briefs of
counsel, and in the case last above cited, the court observed that
"it might be productive of less inconvenience on the whole, if an
opposite rule could be adopted." 112 N.Y. 190.
But we are relieved from the necessity of laying down a general
rule on the subject, because in this case it clearly appears that
the defendant procured or acquiesced in the rulings under which the
trial was conducted, and thereby waived the right to object to
them.
Lahr v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway, 104 N.Y. 268,
294;
Drucker v. Manhattan Railway, 106 N.Y. 157;
Hussner v. Brooklyn Railroad, 114 N.Y. 433;
Shaw v.
Stone, 1 Cush. 228, 243.
The complaint was framed in the double aspect of claiming
damages for the injury accruing to the use and enjoyment of the
plaintiff's property by the obstruction of light and air and the
diminution of rents, as well as damages for the permanent injury to
the market and rental value of the property.
The plaintiff began by introducing evidence, to the admission of
which the defendant took no objection or exception, of the injury
to the use and enjoyment of the property by obstructing the access
of light and air, and by diminishing the rents, down to the time of
trial.
When the plaintiff afterwards offered evidence of the value of
the building, before and after the erection of the defendant's
structure, the defendant objected to this evidence, and it was
excluded by the court.
The defendant's counsel thereupon suggested that the plaintiff's
damages should come down to the commencement of the action only,
and the plaintiff's counsel replied that they claimed damages for
the permanent injury. The court declined to adopt either of these
views, and refused to allow damages to be recovered for the
permanent injury, but ruled that damages might be recovered to the
time of trial. Neither
Page 135 U. S. 442
party having excepted to this ruling at the time, both parties
must be presumed to have assented to it.
In accordance with that ruling, the trial proceeded upon the
theory that damages were not to be awarded for permanent injury,
but were to be assessed down to the time of trial, and in
accordance with that theory, further evidence was introduced by
both parties, without any objection or exception by either party to
the admission of the evidence, or to the rulings under which it
came in.
The defendant having, by his objection sustained by the court,
prevented the plaintiff from introducing evidence of permanent
injury to the building, and having permitted the trial to proceed
in accordance with the ruling of the court admitting evidence of
injury to the time of the trial, without excepting either to that
ruling or to the evidence admitted in accordance with it, could not
afterwards be permitted to change front, and to insist either that
the damages must be assessed for the permanent injury, or that the
damages must be limited to the time of the commencement of the
action.
The court therefore rightly declined to permit the defendant to
introduce evidence (competent only upon the issue of injury to the
permanent value of the property, which by the defendant's
procurement had been excluded from the consideration of the jury)
that the value of the property had been increased by the erection
of the defendant's structure, and rightly refused the instruction,
requested by the defendant after the charge, that the recovery
could be only for the permanent injury to the plaintiff's property.
For the same reason, the defendant's exception to so much of the
charge as allowed damages to be recovered to the time of the trial
cannot be sustained.
There can be no doubt that the court rightly declined to order a
verdict for the defendant, or a verdict for the plaintiff with
nominal damages, and that the instruction which allowed the jury to
award a fair compensation for the discomforts and inconveniences in
the occupation of the plaintiff's building, caused by the existence
of the defendant's structure in front of it, independently of the
running of trains thereon, was sufficiently
Page 135 U. S. 443
favorable to the defendant.
Baltimore & Potomac Railroad
v. Fifth Baptist Church, 108 U. S. 317;
Buccleuch v. Board, L.R. 5 H.L. 418.
As the damages recovered appear by the bill of exceptions, made
part of the record, to have been assessed to the time of trial, the
judgment in this case may be a bar to any subsequent action, at
least for damages suffered before that time.
Hussner v.
Brooklyn Railroad, 114 N.Y. 433, 438;
Warner v.
Bacon, 8 Gray 397, 402;
Goslin v. Corry, 7 Man. &
Gr. 342, 345, 8 Scott N.R. 21, 24. But that point is not now
presented for adjudication.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, not having been a member of the Court when
this case was argued, took no part in the decision.