Schaufele v. Doyle

Thornton, J.

— Suit for an injunction. The plaintiff alleged in her complaint that she was the owner of and carried on the business of keeping a hotel and lodging-house, upon a certain lot fronting on Alvarado Street, *108in the city of Monterey; that the defendants, who were insolvent, were unlawfully 'digging up and regrading Alvarado Street at various places between certain points thereon, and threatened to continue to do so; and unlawfully threatened to fill up and raise the grade of said street in front of plaintiff’s premises to an additional height of about four feet, and thereby ruin her business, and damage her buildings in a sum not less than three thousand dollars, and render them useless and uninhabitable, and necessitate the filling up of her lot to a height of ten feet at the rear end, which would make access to it from that side impracticable and inconvenient; that said defendants in like manner threatened to tear up her sidewalk on said street, and dig up and destroy her sewerage system, and thereby render her premises unwholesome and uninhabitable, and create a nuisance that she would be compelled to abate; that she would suffer the destruction of her business, irreparable injury, and impoverishment if such threats should be carried out. Thus it appears the defendants were sued as mere naked trespassers; but they, in their answer, averred that they had the authority of the city of Monterey to raise the grade of Alvarado Street, and to place a sewer in the same, by virtue of a certain contract between them and the city, made and entered into pursuant to an act of the legislature entitled “An act to provide for work upon streets, lanes, alleys, courts, places, and sidewalks, and for the construction of sewers within municipalities,” and approved March 18, 1885. (Stats. 3885, p. 147.) From the evidence introduced on the trial, it appears that the defendants were about to raise the level of the street about three feet above the level of plaintiff’s hotel. Upon plaintiff’s resting her case, defendants moved for a nonsuit upon the ground that it appeared from the evidence that any damage she might sustain by the performance of the proposed work could be fully compensated for in money; and that it did not appear *109that the defendants were insolvent and unable to make such compensation. The court granted the motion, and from the judgment in favor of defendants, and an order denying a motion for a new trial, plaintiff has prosecuted this appeal. The defendants having offered no evidence of their affirmative defense, it cannot be considered here. They are presented here as naked trespassers, and must be so regarded in determining this appeal. The insolvency of defendants is entirely irrelevant, and that circumstance will be laid out of the case in passing on the questions to be herein determined.

The plaintiff here is an abutter on the street above mentioned, and like every abutter has the right of access to and egress from her land abutting on the street. This right of access and egress is property of which she cannot be deprived, though for a public purpose, without compensation first made. (Williams v. Railroad Co., 16 N. Y. 97-111; Story v. Railroad Co., 90 N. Y. 122; 43 Am. Rep. 146; Lahr v. Railroad Co., 104 N. Y. 268.) This right exists, though the abutter has no estate in fee in the street. Though she does hot own the fee of the street, she does own an easement in it in the right of access to her lot, and egress from it, which are elements of such easement. (Elizabethtown etc. R. R. Co. v. Combs, 10 Bush, 382, 19 Am. Rep. 67, and cases above cited.) In Lexington etc. R. R. Co. v. Applegate, 8 Dana, 310, 33 Am. Dec. 497, the supreme court of Kentucky said, in discussing the rights of abutting owners to the use of a street, that “if it should appear that such use encroaches on any private right, or obstructs the reasonable use and enjoyment of the street, by any person who has an equal right to the use of it, we shall be ready to enjoin all such wrongful appropriation of the highway.” On this subject, see Elliott on Roads and Streets, 526, 527, 537, and cases cited in notes. Upon the facts appearing in this case, we are of opinion that the reasonable use of the *110street by the plaintiff is obstructed, and her individual rights are encroached upon, by the defendants, and that an injunction should have been granted. The injury here is to plaintiff's right of access to her hotel from the street, and egress from the hotel to the street. Like the injury in Richards v. Dower, 64 Cal. 62, it is a permanent injury to the inheritance, which, if permitted to continue, will ripen into a right. It will remain and continue to subject plaintiff to loss and damage, unless thousands of dollars are expended to obviate it. The court erred in granting a nonsuit. Nothing said above is intended to have any bearing on the question of the rights of the authorities of Monterey to improve the street involved herein, when proceeding under a constitutional statute, and in accordance with its provisions. Judgment and order reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.

McFarland, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.