Dodge v. County Commissioners of Essex

Shaw, C. J.

This is an application for a writ of mandamus to the commissioners, requiring them to assess damages for the petitioners against the Eastern Rail Road Company. The facts, as set forth in the petition and admitted by the answer of the commissioners, are, that the plaintiffs are owners of a lot of land in Beverly with a house thereon, situated near the limits of the tail road, but not within them ; that the rail road is near a ledge of rock ; that the company, by the necessary operation of blasting said ledge of rock, for the purpose of grading their rail road, greatly damaged and nearly destroyed the petitioners’ house.

This case presents the question, whether, under the provisions of the revised statutes respecting rail roads, one can have compensation for damages, whose land has not been directly taken for the site of the rail road, nor for supplying materials for its construction.

It is not now necessarily a question, whether the property of an individual, thus necessarily and injuriously affected, and in effect withdrawn from the profitable use and beneficial control of the owner, is appropriated to public uses, within the provision of the 10th article of the declaration of rights. It was quite competent for the legislature, in providing for the prosecution of a great public work, to require compensation to be made to persons injuriously affected by it, though not a case coming within the express requisitions of the bill of rights ; and the corporation, by accepting the act of incorporation, became bound by such provisions. It is a question, therefore, depend mg on the construction of the Rev. Sts. c. 39, which are referred to and made part of their act of incorporation.

It is contended, however, on the part of the Rail Road Company, that the remedy for a damage like that of the petitioners, where no land is taken or appropriated, is not to be sought by an application to the county commissioners, but by an action at common law. But it has been truly answered, on the part of the petitioners, that it is a reasonable and now well settled principle, that when the legislature, under the right of eminent do main, and for the prosecution of works for public use, authorize *382an act or series of acts, the natural and necessary consequence of doing which will be damage to the property of another, and provide a mode for the .assessment and payment of the damages occasioned by such work, the party authorized, acting within the scope of his authority, is not a wrong doer ; an action will not lie as for a tort; and the remedy is by the statute, and not at common law. Stevens v. Middlesex Canal, 12 Mass 466. Stowell v. Flagg, 11 Mass. 364. Lebanon v. Olcott, 1 N. Hamp. 339. Calking v. Baldioin, 4 Wend. 667.

Still the question recurs, whether the statute does provide such remedy in the case stated. The provision is this: “ Every rail road corporation shall be liable to pay all damages, that shall be occasioned by laying out, and making and maintaining their road, or by taking any land or materials, as provided in the preceding section,” &c. Rev. Sts. c. 39, § 56.

The court are of opinion, that the provision is broad enough to embrace damage done to real estate, like that which the petitioners have sustained. It is like the case of a house situated on the brink of a deep cutting, so as to become insecure, and so that it is necessary to remove it. It is a damage occasioned by the laying out and making of the road.

But it is contended that this is to be limited, by reference to § § 54, 55, providing for the taking of lands for the line of the road, and also for materials, if without the limits of the road, by authority of the commissioners. But we can perceive no ground upon which the plain provision of § 56 is to be so limited. It undoubtedly provides for damages in those cases , out it does not limit the provision to those cases.

But it is said that the damage done to the petitioners’ house, not on the line of the rail road, was accidental and consequential, and not the necessary effect of making the rail road.

The statement made in the petition, and admitted in the answer, is, that the company located and constructed their rail road, through land next adjoining that of the petitioners ; that they contracted with persons to blast a ledge of rocks ii such adjoining land, and agreed to indemnify them against am damage arising therefrom ; and that, in blasting said rocks, the -cuse of the petitioners was necessarily destroyed.

*383An authority to construct any public work carries with it an authority to use the appropriate means. An authority to make a rail road is an authority to reduce the line of the road to a level, and for that purpose to make cuts, as well through ledges of rock as through banks of earth. In a remote and detached place, where due precautions can be taken to prevent danger to persons, blasting by gunpowder is a reasonable and appropriate mode of executing such a work ; and, if due precautions are taken to prevent unnecessary damage, is a justifiable mode. It follows that the necessary damage occasioned thereby to a dwellinghouse or other building, which cannot be removed out of the way of such danger, is one of the natural and unavoidable consequences of executing the work, and within the provisions of the statute.

Of course, this reasoning will not apply to damages occasioned by carelessness or negligence in executing such a work. Such careless or negligent act would be a tort, for which an action at law would lie against him who commits, or him who commands it. But where all due precautions are taken, and darn age is still necessarily done to fixed property, it alike is within the letter and the equity of the statute, and the county commissioners have authority to assess the damages. This court are therefore of opinion, that an alternative writ of mandamus be awarded to the county commissioners, to assess the petitioners’ damages, or return their reasons for not doing so