This was an action to recover damages for injury done to certain
land in the City of Washington by reason of the illegal occupation
by a railroad company of the street on which the land abutted. The
land constituted original lot one in square 630, and long prior to
the action, it had been subdivided between the owners, and a plat
thereof recorded. In the partition, it was provided that the alleys
marked on the plat were exclusively for the sole benefit and use of
the sub-lots, should be private and under the control of all owners
of property thereon, and that, except as provided, could not be
closed unless by common consent. Before the action was brought, the
plaintiff had become the owner of the fee of all the sub-lots
constituting original lot one.
Held,
(1) If the plaintiff did not own all of original lot one, she
was entitled to recover damages for any injury done to such part of
it as she did own.
(2) The plaintiff, being the owner of all the sub-lots, was
entitled, under the deed, to close the alleys altogether, and
therefore it was error to instruct the jury that she could not have
conveyed a good title to the land marked on the plat as alleys.
(3) The plaintiff was entitled to recover such damages as were
equivalent to or would fairly compensate her for the injury done to
her land by the defendant. Absolute certainty as to damages in such
cases is impossible. All that the law requires is that such damages
be allowed as, in the judgment of fair men, directly and naturally
resulted from the injury for which suit is brought. What the
plaintiff was entitled to was reasonable compensation for tile
wrongs done to her.
Page 169 U. S. 27
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The action was brought by the plaintiff in error to recover
damages alleged to have been sustained in consequence of the
unlawful obstruction by the defendant in error of D Street, in the
City of Washington.
The jury, having been instructed that the plaintiff could not
recover anything more than nominal damages, returned a verdict for
one cent, and for that amount judgment was entered in her favor,
but without costs. And that judgment was affirmed in the Court of
Appeals of the District.
The declaration alleged that the plaintiff was seised in fee of
a certain lot of land on the corner of D and North Capitol Streets,
in the City of Washington, "being lot numbered one in square six
hundred and thirty," and that the defendant, on the 24th day of
April, 1873, and thereafter at divers other times, had wrongfully,
unlawfully, and injuriously obstructed that street by placing
thereon freight cars in large numbers and suffering the same to
remain unreasonably long; by loading and unloading freight in the
street; by using the street for the general purposes of a freight
yard; by blocking the way with wagons and carts for the loading and
unloading of freight -- the result being that the plaintiff, as
well as the public, was prevented from passing and repassing on D
Street, and more particularly from using that portion of it on
which plaintiff's lot abuts to gain access to or exit from her land
-- and that the defendant still obstructs the street in the manner
stated, whereby it has "materially and seriously diminished the
value of said land, and prevented the plaintiff from selling the
same, though she tried so to do."
Page 169 U. S. 28
The plaintiff brought a suit in April, 1873, to recover damages
for this obstruction, and obtained a judgment, which was paid. The
present suit covers the period of three years from April, 1873. The
declaration in the two suits was the same except that, in the
present action, the declaration contains the additional words, "and
prevented the plaintiff from selling the same, though she tried so
to do."
In the present action, the defendant pleaded 1. Not guilty; 2.
that the plaintiff's alleged cause of action did not accrue within
three years before the institution of this suit; 3. that the
plaintiff ought not to have or maintain her suit because, at a
former term of the court, she recovered judgment against the
defendant in the sum of $843.86 in a suit at law for the same
identical cause of action, which judgment was satisfied. Upon these
pleas issue was joined in the usual form.
The bill of exceptions states that it was undisputed that the
plaintiff owned unimproved land at the corner of D Street Northwest
and North Capitol Street, in the City of Washington; that along the
side of her premises, about where the sidewalk would be, the
defendant maintained and used a railroad track for receiving and
delivering freight; that the track stopped on D Street, being a
siding; that the street was occupied by freight cars on the track,
and carts were backed against the cars, so that access to the
plaintiff's premises on the street was destroyed.
It was conceded that the track was maintained on the street
without authority of law.
At the trial below, the plaintiff testified that she owned the
entire lot No. 1 in square 630; was joint owner with Judge Wylie in
some 28,000 feet, but became sole owner in 1872; had not used the
land since January, 1870, it being impossible to get upon it; had
tried to sell it, but without success, persons wishing to buy
saying that the position of the railroad rendered it useless to
them; that there was no access to the land from D Street, except on
foot; that the occupancy of the street by freight cars, and the
loading and unloading of freight, was continuous during the entire
period covered by
Page 169 U. S. 29
the present suit; that during this period, she made every
possible effort to sell the land, having instructed real estate
agents to sell, or get an offer for purchase. She testified that
the property was directed to be sold in any way that agents could
sell it -- "to sell it or lease it, or in any way to get people to
build upon it" -- and that she authorized its sale as one lot, but
"never confined them to selling the whole." On cross-examination,
she said:
"Of course I gave them the whole lot to sell, but I did not
forbid them to sell any part, and my instructions were to make some
disposition of it so that it could be utilized in some way; to
lease it or sell it, in whole or in part, or in any way. I always
told them I wanted to sell or lease the whole or any part of it in
order to get buildings put up on the front of it."
The plaintiff introduced the testimony of certain real estate
agents who had been authorized to sell the property to the effect
that the street was obstructed; that they took persons there to buy
who objected to purchasing because of the D Street track; that they
could readily have sold the lot for a certain price per foot but
for the obstruction of the track. She also produced the evidence
"of experts as to the value of the land with the D Street track
there, and with that track removed."
It further appeared that an offer made for a part of the lot on
the corner of D Street was declined by the plaintiff because she
did not choose to sell off a part, and two persons who had been
authorized as agents to sell the property testified that they were
instructed to sell lot 1 as an entirety, and were not permitted to
sell in parcels.
The defendant put in evidence the record of conveyances,
disclosing the title, and tending to prove that the plaintiff and
Judge Wylie had owned as tenants in common since 1855 all of
original lot 1, except 35 feet 10 inches, by a depth of 120 feet,
which the latter owned in severalty, and that in December, 1871,
they subdivided their holding into lots numbered from 1 to 11, with
alleys, according to a plat dated January 1872, which was put in
evidence.
The plat here referred to was as follows:
Page 169 U. S. 30
image:a
Upon this plat were recorded the following words:
"This is to certify that we have subdivided that part of lot 1
in square No. 630, owned jointly by us, into the lots as laid down
in the above plat as lots 1 to 11, both inclusive, with the alleys
for their accommodation, which alleys are exclusively for the sole
benefit and use of said lots."
At the time of this subdivision, Judge Wylie and the plaintiff
executed a deed of partition which gave sublots 1 to 5, inclusive,
in severalty to the plaintiff, and sublots from 6 to 11, inclusive,
to Judge Wylie, in severalty, but did not convey the fee in the
alleys. In January, 1872, Wylie conveyed to Tyler, and Tyler to the
plaintiff, sublots 6 to 11, and that portion of original lot 1 (35
feet 10 inches front) just mentioned as not having been held by
plaintiff and Wylie in common, but did not convey the alleys as
such. Those deeds read:
"Lots 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11, being subdivisions of lot one in
square
Page 169 U. S. 31
No. six hundred and thirty, on the ground plan of said city,
according to the metes and bounds, covenants and conditions, set
forth and described in the deed of partition, dated December 28th,
1871, entered into by and between Andrew Wylie and Mary C., his
wife, and the said Margaret Hetzel, and recorded, with plat of
subdivision annexed thereto; . . . also, all that part of said lot
one in said square No. six hundred and thirty at the northeast
corner thereof, fronting on North Capitol Street thirty-five feet
and ten inches, by a depth of one hundred twenty feet, together
with all the improvements, ways, easements, rights, privileges, and
appurtenances to the same belonging or in any wise appertaining,
and all the remainders, reversions, rents, issues, and profits
thereof, and all the estate, right, title, interest, claim and
demand whatsoever, whether at law or in equity, of the said party
of the first part, of, in, to, or out of the said piece or parcel
of land and premises."
The partition deed above referred to contained the following,
among other, clauses:
"And the said parties, Andrew Wylie and Margaret Hetzel, do, and
each of them doth, hereby mutually covenant and agree to and with
each other as follows: That the said Margaret Hetzel, her heirs and
assigns, shall have the right to erect any structure or building
from lot number one on D Street north over or across the alley
entering from that street, on condition that an open space of ten
feet in width and twelve feet in height shall at all times be kept
clear for ingress and egress for the use of the other lots in the
rear bounding on the alleys and area as designated in said plan.
Also that the said Andrew Wylie, his heirs and assigns, being owner
or owners of lots eight, nine, and eleven in said plan, and of the
above-mentioned part of said lot one in said square, not embraced
in this partition, but owned at present by the said Wylie as his
own individual property, fronting 35 10/12 feet on North Capitol
Street, by 120 in depth, may at any time, in their discretion,
close the ten-foot alley running northward from the main area in
the rear of lots eight and nine. Also, that the owner or owners of
lots four and five shall have the like privilege to close the
five-foot
Page 169 U. S. 32
alley along the rear of lot five and part of lot six, so far as
the main area aforesaid. Also that all these alleys and area shall
be private, and to be under the control of all owners of property
touching thereon, and, except as hereinbefore otherwise provided,
shall never be closed unless by common consent, and the owners
thereof, and of each of said lots, shall at all times contribute
their, and each of their, joint and equitable proportions of all
proper and necessary charges for paving the said alleys and area,
and keeping the same in proper condition by means of drains,
sewers, or otherwise, and the same are to be for the exclusive use
of said owners. And the parties hereto have annexed to this deed,
and made it part of the same, for illustration and reference, a
copy of the aforesaid plan of their subdivision. In testimony
whereof,"
etc.
The railroad company also introduced testimony tending to prove
that, since 1872, the property had been assessed for taxes, and
that taxes were paid upon it as subdivided into lots from 1 to
11.
This is substantially all the evidence set forth in the bill of
exceptions.
The plaintiff presented several requests for instructions, among
which were the following:
"The jury are instructed that if they shall find that the
property in question was rendered unsalable by reason of the
alleged nuisance, and, further, that the plaintiff in good faith
was trying to sell it, an allowable method for them to estimate the
measure of damages is to ascertain what the plaintiff might have
obtained for the property with the obstruction there, and what she
might have obtained for it with the obstruction removed, and allow
her the legal rate of interest -- that is, six percent -- on the
difference for so long a period, not exceeding three years, as the
jury shall be satisfied that she was so continuing her efforts to
sell it."
"If you shall find for the plaintiff, then, having ascertained a
sum you think would on the 24th day of April, 1876, have
compensated the plaintiff, you are allowed, in your discretion, to
add interest, not exceeding six percentum, upon that sum from that
date, provided you shall think that such sum, without
Page 169 U. S. 33
interest, is not a fair compensation for all the loss you find
that the plaintiff has sustained."
"If the jury shall find that the defendant so obstructed the
access to and egress from the plaintiff's land that she could not
use the same as such property is generally used, then the jury are
at liberty to allow such damages as they shall find have resulted
from the act of the defendant, irrespective of any attempt made by
the plaintiff to sell the same."
Each of these instructions was refused, and to that action of
the court the plaintiff at the time duly excepted.
Thereupon, the bill of exceptions states,
"the court instructed the jury that the plaintiff offered her
property for sale as a whole, and undertook to sell it as lot one;
that the action was for damages for her not being able to sell lot
one; that the testimony showed that even if she had received an
offer for lot one, she could not consummate the sale, because she
did not own the fee in the alleys. This being so, and the
defendant's counsel conceding that the structure was illegal, the
court instructed the jury that the plaintiff could not recover
anything more than nominal damages, and thereupon instructed the
jury to find for the plaintiff for one cent damages, which was
done."
1. In the opinion of the Court of Appeals, it is said that there
was not a particle of evidence in the record as to the salable or
rental value of the land without reference to the existence of the
nuisance complained of, and that such facts were essential to be
ascertained in order to furnish a basis for estimating the damages.
It is clear, however, that there was evidence before the jury "as
to the value of the land with the D Street track thereon, and with
that track removed." It is so expressly stated in the bill of
exceptions. The amounts given by the witnesses when testifying as
to value were not set out in the bill of exceptions, for the
reason, we infer, that the real contest was as to questions of law
arising upon the instructions asked by the plaintiff, and the
ruling of the court that the plaintiff could recover only nominal
damages. The bill of exceptions was evidently prepared with
reference to those questions. It must therefore be assumed, upon
the
Page 169 U. S. 34
record, that there was evidence as to value upon which the
plaintiff was entitled to go to the jury unless she was precluded
by some principle of law from recovering anything more than nominal
damage .
2. The Court of Appeals, after observing that the instructions
asked by the plaintiff were founded upon the assumption of injury
to her in respect of all the lost contained in the subdivision of
original lot 1, and did not propound any proper or exact rule for
estimating damages, said:
"But, apart from all this, the evidence upon which the prayers
were founded showed a state of case quite different from that set
out in the declaration. It is not upon the evidence alone, but upon
the pleadings and the evidence applicable to the pleadings, that
the plaintiff can in any case recover, and the one must consist
with the other. The declaration here, as we have seen, proceeds as
for an injury to the entire original lot, without any reference or
respect to the subdivision of that lot, and that the lots made of
the subdivision are separate and distinct parcels of ground, fully
recognized and provided for by law, and entirely ignores the fact
that the plaintiff never was in reality seised in severalty of the
original lot one as it existed before the subdivision and as
declared upon in the declaration. The proof produced by the
defendant, showing how lot one was originally held and how it had
been subdivided and partitioned, and how title to all the lots was
acquired by the plaintiff and their relation to each other and the
streets upon which they abut, entirely negatives and refutes the
case presented in the declaration and the right of the plaintiff to
recover thereon."
Undoubtedly the declaration claims damages for the injury done
to the entire original lot No. 1 in square 630. It appears that
when this action was brought, the plaintiff owned all the sublots
which, with the alleys as marked on the plat of 1872, constituted
original lot 1. If the railroad company, by its illegal use of D
Street, had done injury to the land or any part thereof within the
exterior boundaries of original lot 1, we are unable to perceive
why damages might not be recovered in this action
Page 169 U. S. 35
with respect to such part as in fact the plaintiff owned,
although she may have claimed to own more than belonged to her. In
estimating the damages, the jury could take into consideration the
subdivision of original lot 1 and eliminate from their calculation
any sublot belonging to the plaintiff that was not damaged in
salable or rental value by the nuisance in question. So, if the
plaintiff did not own the alleys marked on the plat, that fact
could be given proper weight in estimating the damages she was
entitled to recover -- that is, if damages were claimed in respect
of more land than belonged to the plaintiff, the recovery could
have been limited to the injury done to the part that she did
own.
3. The jury were instructed that the testimony showed that the
plaintiff offered her property for sale as a whole, and undertook
to sell it as a whole. This was error, for the instruction implied
that the plaintiff had not put her property on the market except as
a whole, whereas the bill of exceptions shows that while there was
evidence tending to prove that she wished or preferred to sell it
as a whole, there was also evidence that the plaintiff authorized
her land to be sold in parcels, or as a whole -- indeed, "in any
way."
4. The jury were also erroneously instructed that the action was
for damages by reason of the plaintiff's not being able to sell lot
1, and that, according to the testimony, "if she received an offer
for lot one, she could not consummate the sale because she did not
own the fee in the alleys." In the first place, the action was for
damages for the injury done to the value of the plaintiff's land,
and the unnecessary recital in the declaration that she had tried
to sell did not convert the action into one only for damages for
not being able to consummate a particular sale. If the salable or
rental value of the land was substantially or materially diminished
by the defendant's illegal use of D Street, she would be entitled
to recover without proving that, on a specific occasion she tried
to sell, but failed to effect a sale. In the second place, the
plaintiff's right to damages for material injury done to the land
owned by her would not have been defeated even if it were true that
she did not own the fee in the alleys. If the
Page 169 U. S. 36
alleys had been dedicated to public use, so as to be beyond the
control of those owning the abutting lots, plaintiff would
nevertheless have been entitled to recover in this action for any
substantial diminution in the value of her land, or of any part
thereof, arising from the nuisance in question. Apart from this, we
do not perceive why she might not have passed, by deed, the fee of
the ground marked on the plat as alleys. By the Revised Statutes of
the District of Columbia, it is provided that
"the ways, alleys, or passages laid out or expressed on any plat
or subdivision shall be and remain to the public,
or
subject to the uses declared by the person making such subdivision
at all times under the same police regulations as the alleys laid
off by the commissioners on division with the original
proprietors."
Rev.Stat. D.C. § 480. What were the uses in respect of
these alleys as declared by the persons who made the subdivision of
lot 1? Upon the plat of the subdivision, it is declared that the
alleys "are exclusively for the sole benefit and use of said lots."
And the deed of partition between Wylie and Hetzel expressly
provides that "all these alleys and area shall be private, and to
be under the control of all owners of property thereon;" that,
except as provided, they "shall never be closed, unless by common
consent;" and that "the same are to be for the exclusive use of
said owners." Now when the plaintiff became the owner of all the
sublots of original lot 1, is it to be doubted that she could have
closed the alleys altogether, and have conveyed a good title to all
the land constituting the original lot 1? If this be so, it was
error to instruct the jury that she could not have made a good
title in fee to the entire original lot, as one body of land,
including the alleys on which the respective sublots abutted.
5. It results from what has been said that the trial court erred
in instructing the jury that the plaintiff could recover nothing
more than nominal damages. In our opinion, she was entitled to
recover such damages as were equivalent to the injury done to her
by the defendant's inexcusable and persistent occupation and use of
a public street in violation of law, and in disregard of her rights
as an owner of adjacent
Page 169 U. S. 37
property. At the trial of the first case brought by the
plaintiff against the railroad company on account of this nuisance,
Judge Hagner instructed the jury that they might ascertain from the
evidence what, in the absence of the D Street track, would be the
fair value of the property in its unimproved condition during the
time covered by the declaration, and if they found that the
property during that period remained in that condition by reason of
the track maintained and used by the defendant, then they might
allow such sum as was equal to six percent interest on such value
if they believed that the loss of revenue was caused wholly by the
track, or a lesser sum proportionate to the effect which the
maintenance and use of the track had in causing the lot to lie
unproductive. This was substantially the proposition of law
embodied in one of the instructions asked by the plaintiff.
What was the plaintiff's land reasonably worth, during the
period covered by the declaration, if D Street had not been
occupied and used by the railroad company in the manner disclosed
by the evidence? In the absence of the defendant's track, was there
a reasonable certainty that it could have been used or sold? If so,
for what purpose could it have been profitably used, or for what
sum could it have been sold? Was it reasonably certain that neither
the original lot nor any sublot could have been used or sold while
the street was obstructed by the defendant's track? These were all
proper inquiries by the jury in determining what damages were
equivalent to, or would fairly compensate the plaintiff for, the
injury done.
Of course, in such inquiries, absolute certainty as to the
damages sustained is in many cases impossible. All that the law
requires is that such damages be allowed as, in the judgment of
fair men, directly and naturally resulted from the injury for which
suit is brought. This is the rule which obtains in civil actions
for damages. They have their foundation in the idea of just
compensation for wrongs done. In
United States Trust Company v.
O'Brien, 143 N.Y. 284, 287-289, which was an action for
damages for the breach of certain covenants contained in a lease,
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM,
Page 169 U. S. 38
speaking for the Court of Appeals of New York when a member of
that court, said:
"It is clear, and so it has been held in many cases, that the
rule of damages should not depend upon the form of the action. In
all civil actions, the law gives, or endeavors to give, a just
indemnity for the wrong which has been done to the plaintiff, and
whether the act was of the kind designated as a 'tort,' or one
consisting of a breach of a contract, is on the question of damages
an irrelevant inquiry. As was said by Rapallo, J., in
Baker v.
Drake, 53 N.Y. 211, 220, the inquiry is what is an adequate
indemnity to the party injured?, and the answer cannot be affected
by the form of the action in which he seeks his remedy."
Again:
"In using the words 'uncertain, speculative, and contingent' for
the purpose of excluding that kind of damage, it is not meant to
assert that the loss sustained must be proved with the certainty of
a mathematical demonstration to have been the necessary result of
the breach of covenant by the defendant. The plaintiff is not bound
to show to a certainty that excludes the possibility of a doubt
that the loss to him resulted from the action of the defendant in
violating his agreement. In many cases, such proof cannot be given,
and yet there might be a reasonable certainty, founded upon
inferences legitimately and properly deducible from the evidence,
that the plaintiff's loss was not only in fact occasioned by the
defendant's violation of his covenant, but that such loss was the
natural and proximate result of such violation. Certainty to
reasonable intent is necessary, and the meaning of that language is
that the loss or damage must be so far removed from speculation or
doubt as to create in the minds of intelligent and reasonable men
the belief that it was most likely to follow from the breach of the
contract, and was a probable and direct result thereof. Such a
result would be regarded as having been within the contemplation of
the parties and as being the natural accompaniment and the
proximate result of the violation of the contract. . . . The proof
may sometimes be rather difficult upon the question whether the
damage was the just or proximate result of the breach of the
covenant. In such case, it does not
Page 169 U. S. 39
come with very good grace from the defendant to insist upon the
most specific and certain proof as to the cause and the amount of
the damage when he has himself been guilty of a most inexcusable
violation of the covenants which were inserted for the very purpose
of preventing the result which has come about."
We are of opinion that the Court of Appeals erred in affirming
the judgment of the Supreme Court of the District.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded, with
directions for a new trial in the Supreme Court of the District,
and for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.