1 The Court will not reexamine the findings of fact made by the
Court of Claims upon evidence. P.
260 U. S.
126.
2. An unintentional injury to a bridge pier in the making of
navigation improvements by the government
held, at most,
in the nature of a tort, and not a taking of property by the United
States for which damages might be recovered on the theory of
contract. P.
260 U. S.
126.
55 Ct.Clms. 480 affirmed.
Appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims dismissing the
petition in an action to recover the value of a pier alleged to
have been destroyed, and hence taken, by the act of the United
States.
Page 260 U. S. 126
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant had an authorized bridge across the Mississippi
River with a pivot pier and draw to permit the passage of vessels.
As a necessary incident, it maintained what is called a protection
pier extending down stream. In consequence of later authorized
constructions, it became necessary to deepen the channel on the
easterly side of the pier, and the part of this work with which we
are concerned was done by the United States. The bed of the stream
by the side of the pier was solid rock, and into this the United
States drilled and blasted it with dynamite. The work was done in
the usual way, and with more than ordinary care, but, by the action
of the water driven upon the pier by the blast, and possibly by the
concussion of the blasts themselves, portions of the pier fell into
the river, and some damage was inflicted. It could have been
repaired for $1,000. The company, however, rebuilt the bridge to
fit it for heavier traffic, and brought this suit alleging that the
pier was destroyed and in that way taken by the United States.
An appreciable part of the claimant's argument consists in an
attempt to reopen the findings of fact and to maintain that the
pier was destroyed, as giving more force to the contention that it
was taken. This, of course, is vain.
Union Pacific Ry. Co. v.
United States, 116 U. S. 154;
Talbert v. United States, 155 U. S.
45. We must assume, as we have stated from the findings
of the Court of Claims, that the pier was not destroyed, but simply
was damaged in a way that could have been repaired for a moderate
sum. However small the damage, it may be true that deliberate
action in some cases might generate the same claim as other forms
of deliberate withdrawal of property from the admitted owner.
United States
v.
Page 260 U. S. 127
Cress, 243 U. S. 316,
243 U. S. 329.
But, without considering how the line would be drawn when such
action took place in the improvement of navigation, it is enough to
say that this is an ordinary case of incidental damage which, if
inflicted by a private individual, might be a tort, but which could
be nothing else. In such cases, there is no remedy against the
United States.
See Bedford v. United States, 192 U.
S. 217,
192 U. S.
224.
Judgment affirmed.