Judges: Berry
Filed Date: 7/3/1882
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
1. The plaintiff complains that between July 1 and October 1, 1880, defendant, .“with its agents, contractors, and large force of men,” entered upon his land and committed trespasses by digging, etc. Defendant answers that the acts complained of were done by subcontractors of a railroad company with which defendant had contracted for the construction of a railroad from Minneapolis to Osseó, which defendant was engaged in constructing, and that, in order to construct the same, it was necessary to enter upon plaintiff’s land and dig, etc. This is in effect an admission that the wort constituting the acts complained of was done under a contract entered into by defendant, or, in other words, that the defendant had contracted for its performance, and thereby directed it to be done. In such circumstance defendant’s liability is the ordinary liability of one who commands or directs the commission of a trespass. The rule by which an employer is relieved from responsibility for the negligence of a subcontractor working by the job, has no application here.
2. This action is brought to recover damages for the trespasses mentioned, and, as a defence, the answer sets up certain condemnation proceedings, in which, and on October 1, 1880, an award was made by commissioners for defendant’s appropriation for its right of way of the strip of plaintiff’s land upon which the trespasses were committed. Defendant also alleges an acceptance by the plaintiff of the amount awarded by a jury upon appeal from the commissioners. , It appeared in the case that the plaintiff, although he saw the trespassers at work upon his premises, remained silent. He testifies that he did so from fear of violence, though this does not seem to be important, except, perhaps, to rebut any claim that his silence was intended as a sanction. It is contended on defendant’s behalf that plaintiffs silence and failure to institute restraining proceedings were a waiver of his right to prepayment of compensation for the appropriation of his property — a consent that the work might go on, or a license to that effect.
The rule first announced in this State in Winona & St. Peter R. Co. v. Denman, 10 Minn. 208, (267,) and which has been steadily adhered to, is that the assessment of compensation in condemnation proceedings is to be made as of the time of the filing of the award of the commissioners, — that is to say, the assessment is to be made with reference to the value and condition of the premises at that time, (Sherwood v. St. Paul & Chicago Ry. Co., 21 Minn. 122; Warren v. First Div. St. Paul & Pac. R. Co., Id. 424; Conter v. St. Paul & Sioux City R. Co., 22 Minn. 342;) and hence damages for any trespass upon the premises committed before that time are not regularly proper to be taken into account in making up the award. From all this it follows that in this state there is no such thing as a waiver of prepayment of compensation for property taken under the eminent domain, upon any theory or idea that compensation for damages done, whether by trespass, consent, or license, before the filing of the award, can properly be included in the award, as such; and therefore the authorities which hold a contrary doctrine elsewhere are not applicable here. It further follows that as respects damages for trespass committed before the filing of the award, though committed in the course of the construction of the road, the land-owner must have a remedy outside of the condemnation proceedings and the award therein, or he has none at all which he can enforce.
This, we believe, disposes of all the errors assigned by defendant except one. R. P. Russell, (one of the commissioners,) called as a witness by the plaintiff, was asked the following question, defendant excepting: “Considering the property as you saw it when you were there, with the cut through it, * * * what, in your opinion, would the market value of that property be lessened at that time by reason of that cut through it, as it was then, supposing they [i. e., the defendant] had gone off and abandoned it afterwards ?” The time
Order affirmed.