Dana v. City of Boston

Knowlton, J.

This is a petition for the assessment of damages to the lands of the petitioners from a change of grade in Brookline Avenue, at and near the place where it crosses the Boston and Albany railroad. The order under which the *99change was made was passed on September 16, 1884, and the damages are to be assessed as of that date. The petitioners were allowed to put in evidence the St. 1894, c. 439, and the Pierre Humbert, Jr. plan referred to in that statute, and the respondent excepted. It is clear that the statute and plan were not competent for the purpose of showing how the rights of the parties were affected by acts of the public authorities subsequent to the order changing the grade of Brookline Avenue. But with the consent of both parties, as we suppose, the jury took a view of the premises, and saw, among other things, conditions and changes which arose under this subsequent act of the Legislature. It was permissible to aid the jury in understanding the evidence introduced in their view, by showing what changes had been made after the date of the original order, and how they were made. Moreover, the evidence was competent as presenting to the jury a scheme for the development of the property, which was said by some of the witnesses to be a proper and desirable plan for the use and improvement of the petitioners’ land. In determining the damages it was proper for the jury to consider feasible methods of using the property in order to see how it would be affected by the change of grade in the use to which it would be likely to be put. Dickenson v. Fitchburg, 13 Gray, 546, 558. Hartshorn v. Worcester, 113 Mass. 111. Marsden v. Cambridge, 114 Mass. 490. Stone v. Heath, 135 Mass. 561. Beale v. Boston, 166 Mass. 53.

The judge.might well exclude the evidence offered by the respondent, of the doings of the board of health under the act of 1893. There was no dispute between the parties that these doings had reference to conditions which were not in any way affected by the change of grade in the street. The filling, which the respondent offered to show that the board of health ordered, was only to a grade much below the grade at which the petitioners would have been obliged to fill in order to use their lands, if the grade of Brookline Avenue had not been raised.

The judge was not called upon to instruct the jury in regard to damages to be recovered for the laying out of streets according to the Humbert plan. Sexton v. North Bridegwater, 116 Mass. 200, 207. Such damages were not in issue in this case, *100and there is nothing to show that the jury was asked to consider them. The damages which the petitioners sought to recover were for the effect of the change .of grade upon the land, and particularly in reference to filling the land to make it conform to the higher grade of the street.

Exceptions overruled.