Phœnix Mutual Life Insurance v. City of Lincoln

Barnes, J.

On tlie former bearing of this case a judgment for tbe plaintiff was reversed, and tbe cause was remanded to tbe district court, with directions to make the railroad companies defendants, in order to enable tbe court to determine tbe question of tbe liability, as between them and tbe city of Lincoln, for damages to tbe plaintiff’s property abutting upon what is known as tbe “Tenth street viaduct,” caused by tbe erection of that structure. Phœnix Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. City of Lincoln, 87 Neb. 626. When the mandate was returned to tbe district court tbe plaintiff filed its amended petition; summons was issued thereon and seiwed upon tbe railroad companies. They appeared and demurred separately upon tbe ground that tbe facts stated therein were not sufficient to constitute a cause of action as against them. Tbe demurrers were overruled, and, answering over, they alleged tbe facts which they now contend constitute a complete defense to any liability on tlieir part. There being no dispute as to tbe facts, and tbe amount' of plaintiff’s damages having been settled for tbe purpose only of tbe trial by stipulation, a joint judgment was rendered against them and tlie city of Lincoln, (Tom which all of tbe defendants appealed.

Tbe record discloses that tlie railroad tracks of the *152Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company, the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, and the Chicago & Northwestern Railway Company cross what is known as “Tenth street/’ in apopulous part of the city of Lincoln, and at the same point; that Lincoln is a city of the first class, having a population of 40,000 and less than 100,000 inhabitants; that at a regular election held on the 7th day of May, 1907, the question of the necessity for the construction of a viaduct on Tenth street over and across the railroad tracks of the above named defendants was duly submitted to the electors of that city, and the majority of said electors voted to require such construction; that thereafter an ordinance was enacted declaring it necessary for the public safety and convenience that said viaduct be constructed by the railroad companies; that the companies refused to comply with the provisions of the ordinance,, and a mandamus suit was commenced on behalf of the city to require the defendants to build said viaduct; that pending the mandamus proceeding the railroad companies entered into a stiprilation with the city whereby they agreed to build the viaduct, and the city agreed to commence proceedings for the appraisement of damages to abutting property owners, and thereafter plaintiff’s damages were appraised and fixed at the sum of $500, from which appraisement the plaintiff appealed, to the district court, where judgment was rendered against the city of Lincoln for that amount; and from that judgment the city prosecuted the former appeal. When the mandate was returned to the district court plain!iff complied with the directions contained therein, and the proceedings above set forth were had, and, from the judgment therein rendered against them, all of the defendants have appealed.

It is contended by the railroad companies that there was a misjoinder of causes of action, for which they insist the judgment of the district court must be reversed. It is argued that the action, so far as the city was concerned, was founded on the provisions of its charter. *153while the action as against them is one in tort, and that such canses of action cannot properly be joined. IVe are of opinion that this contention is unsound. Section 21 of the Rill of Rights provides: “The property of no person shall he taken or damaged for public use without just compensation therefor.” It must be conceded that the viaduct, which the railroad companies were required to build, was necessary, not only for the benefit of the general public, but for the safe and convenient operation of the defendants’ trains over and across a public thoroughfare. It must also be conceded that the construction and maintenance of the viaduct upon the highway in front of the plaintiff’s lots, adjacent to and abutting thereon, created such additional burden as to entitle it to maintain an action for damages therefor. Hastings & G. I. R. Co. v. Ingalls, 15 Neb. 123.

Section 10578, Ann. St. 1909, provides, among other things, that every railroad corporation shall maintain and keep in good repair all bridges, with their abutments, which such corporation shall construct for the purpose of enabling their road to pass over or under any turnpike or public road. It is admitted that by its charter provisions the city had the power to require the railroad companies to construct the viaduct in question, and had lawfully exercised that power. It therefore follows that, when constructing the viaduct in compliance with the orders of the city, the companies were acting under lawful authority, and their act cannot be said to have been wrongfully or tortiously done. We have then a lawful act properly done which gave the plaintiff a right of action, which if originally brought against the railroad companies and the -city together would not have been a misjoinder of causes of action.

It is next contended by the railroad companies that this case was originally commenced against the city by plaintiff’s appeal from the award of damages, to which they could not thereafter lawfully be made parties, for that would amount to the bringing of another or different ac*154tion against them. In disposing of this contention it is sufficient to say that by our former judgment the proceeding of which complaint is uoav made was required in order to determine the rights of all of the parties interested in the subject of the litigation. The order thus made is the law of the case, and is, and will be, adhered to at all stages of this action.

It may be further ‘said that, when the railroad corn-pan ies were served with a summons duly issued upon the' plaintiff’s amended petition, they appeared generally, and thus conferred jurisdiction upon the court for all purposes; and it must be observed that, if they are liable to the plaintiff at all for the damages occasioned ly. the construction of the viaduct, it can make no difference to them whether that liability is determined in this action, or in a separate suit brought for that purpose.

This brings us to the main question presented for our determination, which is, whether the plaintiff is entitled to recover against both the city and the railroad companies, and, if not against both, which of them is liable for the, damages to plaintiff’s property caused by the construction of the viaduct? From what has already been said thei’e can be no doubt of plaintiff’s right of recovery. It is contended, however, that no judgment can be rendered against the city, because it acted in its governmental capacity only, and, if this be so, the contention is well founded. It clearly appears that the city of Lincoln in ordering the railway companies to construct the viaduct in question acted pursuant to the governmental power conferred upon it by its charter provisions for the protection * of life and property. The exercise of such power does not of itself subject the municipality to a private action for damages. 2 Elliott, Roads and Streets (3d ed.) sec. 890 (702); Wagner v. Portland, 40 Or. 389; Burkam v. Ohio & M. R. Co., 122 Ind. 344; Allentown v. Kramer, 73 Pa. St. 406; Murphy v. Chicago, R. I. & P R. Co., 247 Ill. 614; 3 Dillon, Municipal Corporations (5th ed.) sec. 1159.

It is claimed by the railroad companies that by caus*155ing plaintiff’s damages to be appraised the city rendered itself liable therefor. We cannot assent to this proposition. By the section of the statutes above mentioned the city was authorized to provide for appraising, assessing and determining the damages caused to any property by the construction of the viaduct and its approaches; but nothing is contained therein which requires the city to pay such damages. This section also provides that the damages may be paid by the city and assessed against the property benefited; but it contains the further provision that the mayor and council shall have power,, whenever any railroad company fails, neglects or refuses to erect, construct, reconstruct or repair any viaduct or viaducts sifter being required so to do, as therein provided, to proceed with such work by contract in such manner as shall be provided by ordinance, and assess the costs thereof against the property of the railroad company or companies required to do the same; and such cost shall be a valid lien against such property, and be also a legal indebtedness of said company or companies in favor of the city, and be enforced and collected by suit in the proper court. It must be said,- in passing, that the damages occasioned by the construction of a viaduct are a necessary part of the costs of such construction. So it seems clear, from a consideration of that section, that it was the intention of the legislature to relieve the city from any liability for the cost of such construction; and that the provision relating to the appraisement of damages must have been inserted therein solely for the benefit of the railroads. This question was before the supreme court of Connecticut in Burritt v. City of New Haven, 42 Conn. 174, where, in an able and exhaustive opinion, it was held that the city was not liable for damages to abutting property by reason of the construction of a viaduct over and across the tracks of the. New Haven & Northhampton Railroad Company. A careful examination of the record satisfies us that neither by any act, stipulation or agreement on its part has the city rendered itself liable for the *156damages to plaintiff's property. It follows that the judgment against the city of Lincoln- must be reversed.

But one question remains for consideration, which may. be stated as follows: Upon the undisjmted facts of this case, are the railroad companies liable to abutting property owners for the damages caused by the construction of the viaduct? Railroads are given the right to lay their tracks in and across the streets of the municipalities of • this state by statute, and this right carries with it a corresponding duty on their part to construct and maintain at all times proper and safe crossings on the streets intersected. Omaha & R. V. R. Co. v. Brady, 39 Neb. 27. It would therefore seem that, when such companies in the performance of that duty are required to construct and maintain viaducts, they are liable for the cost of such construction, and all of the necessary incidents thereto. The facts of the case of Burritt v. City of New Haven, supra, are like those in the case at bar. That is a leading and well-considered case. It was there said: “The privilege of crossing the streets of the city is a part of the franchise of the company, and the necessary approaches constructed for the purpose of restoring city streets to their former usefulness under and as a condition of the exercise of the privilege are a part of the railroad structure authorized by its charter, and in their erection a party incidentally injured has as perfect a remedy against the company for consequential damages, as for a direct injury by it in the original construction of its railroad. The obligation to make compensation is as strong in one case as in the other, and to the discharge of that obligation in the manner prescribed it impliedly hound itself by its acceptance of its charter. Parker v. Boston & M. R. Co., 3 Cush. (Mass.) 107, 116; Bradley v. New York & N. H. R. Co., 23 Conn. 294, 310.

“It is insisted that this case is essentially different from the one last cited, because here the bridge is found to have been required by public convenience and necessity only, while there it was for the sole benefit and accom*157modation of the railroad company.' We do not see that this distinction affects the obligation of the company in this particular. If public convenience and necessity, by the growth of the city and the resulting increase of travel, require the change in order to restore the street to its former usefulness, the duty of the company under its charter, which was before inchoate, is complete, and the same responsibility adheres to it as if the work was demanded for its corporate benefit alone; and to the responsibility in the performance of the work are attached all the legal consequences which flow from the improper and injurious performance of it. The fact that the duty is by law imposed upon the company is sufficient to charge it with all the consequences of such an execution of it as results in injury to others.” To the same effect are State v. St. Paul, M. & M. R. Co., 35 Minn. 131; State v. Minnesota Transfer Co., 80 Minn. 108; State v. St. Paul, M. & M. R. Co., 98 Minn. 380; Northern P. R. Co. v. State, 208 U. S. 583.

The ordinance under which the railroad companies were granted the right to cross Tenth street provided that, by the acceptance and exercise of the rights so conferred, the companies would save and keep the city harmless from the payment of any and all damages growing out of the exercise of those rights. By exercising the right granted by this ordinance, the railroad companies assumed the obligations thereby imposed; and it necessarily follows that they are liable for the payment of all damages occasioned, not only by the original occupation, but also the necessary expense of making all needful and proper changes in the situation in order to insure to the public a safe and suitable means of travel upon that street; and it can make no difference whether they performed that obligation voluntarily or under legal compulsion.

From the foregoing we are of opinion that both upon principle and precedent the railroad companies are liable to the plaintiff for the damages occasioned by the con*158struction of the viaduct, and the judgment of the district court as to them should be affirmed. The record, however, contains a stipulation which leaves the question as to the amount of plaintiff’s damages open for futher consideration, and the judgment of the district court is therefore reversed and the cause is remanded, with directions to allow the parties to litigate that question if they so desire; and, if not, then that court will render a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the amount stipulated, and against the railroad companies.

REVERSED.

Sedgwick, J., concurs in the conclusion. Reese, C. J., not sitting.