(After overruling several minor objections raised by the counsel for the plaintiff in error.) The only real questions are, 1. Whether the plaintiff below showed such special damage as entitled him to recover: and 2. If that was shown, whether his abating the nuisance was such a remedy as barred his action.
In considering the special damage, we must lay out of view the fact now set up, that the road was more contiguous, and therefore more beneficial to the plaintiff below than to others. He might have been more injured by the obstruction on this account than others; but it is not such an injury as the law will notice. The right of action for obstructing a highway can- never be determined by the distance at which the party resides from it. All the cases ■*agree, that there must be some specific damage to the party before he can sue.
The only evidence of damage in this case, is derived from the testimony of Seely. He swears that Dart had considerable trouble in pulling down the fence. The witness was with Dart four times when he pulled it down; once when Dart was returning from church, and again when he had been out, and was returning home in a severe rain storm.
The defendant openly declared at the trial, that he had erected the fence, and intended to do it again; though we understand from the return, that he had not yet done so at the time of the trial, after it was last abated by the plaintiff.
The damage to the plaintiff was but a trifle. It consisted in the delay, and the time spent in abating the nuisance. Gibbs would not place it higher than 6 cents at each abatement, or 25 cents in the whole.
*610It is conceded that special damage would maintain tne action; but denied that this is the kind of damage intended by the rule. The question is certainly not without its difficulties. The English cases have fluctuated; and until a recent decision of the king’s bench, no rule defining the nature or limit of the individual injury which is to warrant the action, can be found. In Hart v. Bassett, (T. Jones, 156,) it was held enough that the plaintiff was obliged, by the obstruction, to convey his tithes by a more circuitous route* Iveson v. Moor, (Carth. 451,) gave an action where the plaintiff was prevented from carrying his coal in carts and carriages; and Chichester v. Letheridge, (Willes, 71,) holds, that obstructing the highway by bars, &c., and withholding the plaintiff from abating the nuisance, so that he could pass, was sufficient. /
Hubert v. Groves, (1 Esp. Rep. 148,) and which was considered by the king’s bench on motion for a new trial, held, that being put to the necessity of going a circuitous route, was not such special damage as would warrant the action. And there -is a dictum in Paine v. Partrich, (Carth. 194,) that delay of a journey by which one is *damnifled, and some important affair neglected, is insufficient.
Mor are the American cases exactly uniform. In Hughes v. Heiser, (1 Bin. 463,) where the cases already mentioned are considered, the plaintiff recovered on the ground that he was prevented from passing down the Big Schuylkill with his rafts. But in Barr v. Sievens, (1 Bibb’s Kentucky Rep. 293,) Trimble, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, says it is not enough that one is turned out of his way; and he seems to require that some corporal damage should arise from the injury.
■ The late case of Rose v. Miles, (4 M. & S. 101,) overrules the dictum in Paine v. Partrich, and the case of Hubert v. Groves. It adopts the other English cases., with the principle of Hughes v. Heiser; and, for the first time, seems to furnish an express general rule ftir the class of cases which we are considering. The plaintiff’s passage down a public navigable river was obstructed; and he was put to expense in going a circuitous route. An action on the ease for this *611injury was sustained by the whole court; and we think the principle to be extracted from the case is, that any, the least injury to an individual, as an expense of time or money, or labor, &c., entitles him to an action. It is a special damage, as contra-distinguished from the injury to the public in general, which is theoretical, or resting in presumption of law only. Lord Ellenborough said the injury did not rest merely in contemplation. The plaintiff was impeded in the act of navigating, and incurred expense. If a man’s time or money is valuable, it seemed to him that this was a particular damage.
Such seems to be the distinction deducible from a majority of the cases.
In the case at bar, the plaintiff was certainly put to some expense. There was a delay, and labor in abating the nuisance, so that he might proceed on the road. True, the injury was trivial; and it is not difficult to see that the damages are excessive. But we cannot interfere on that ground where the action below is for a tort.
""But it is contended that the remedy by action was barred by the abatement; that the plaintiff, having taken the means of redress into his own hands, is concluded, as in case of distraining an article damage feasant. We do not understand this to be the effect of removing a nuisance. True, it is treated in the books as a remedy by the act of the party. But it does not operate to redress the injury like a distress. It is preventive merely; and resembles more an entry into land, or recaption of personal property. Heither will bar an action for the original invasion of the plaintiff’s right. Suppose in this case the plaintiff’s horse or carriage had been injured; would it be pretended that his afterwards throwing down the fence, should operate as an indemnity ? The ease at bar depends on the same principle.
The judgment below should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.