Tassinari v. Massachusetts Turnpike Authority
Tassinari v. Massachusetts Turnpike Authority
Opinion of the Court
This is a petition for assessment of damages under Gr. L. c. 79. The jury viewed the locus. Upon con-
When a verdict for the respondent is directed upon the pleadings and the opening statement, the “facts set forth in the opening must be considered as true and in the light most favorable” to the petitioner. Aragona v. Parrella, 325 Mass. 583, 584. Cohen v. Suburban Sidney-Hill, Inc. 343 Mass. 217. In his opening to the jury, counsel for the petitioner stated the petitioner’s claim substantially as follows: “Petitioner is the owner of the premises numbered 17-19 and 21-23 Ferry Street. The building numbered 21-23 is occupied by the petitioner. The building numbered 17-19 is vacant. Prior to the taking of the area near the property owned by the petitioner and prior to the time that two walls were constructed as part of the entrance to . . . [a] tunnel petitioner’s father conducted the business upon the premises numbered 21-23 Ferry Street. Petitioner has conducted this business for approximately nine years prior to the commencement of this action. Some time during September, 1959, the respondent commenced construction of the opening for the tunnel. Up to that time the petitioner’s business had been conducted in the usual manner in which it had theretofore been conducted. Prior to the construction of the entrance to the tunnel, Ferry Street was a through street open on either end, and the petitioner conducted a meat and provisions business upon the above premises. Prior to the construction of the walls, access to petitioner’s property was open from either end of Ferry Street. Trucks and cars would drive up to the property and an established number of customers would come to purchase merchandise on credit and/or on a cash and carry basis. The flow of business was constant until some time after the respondent began to erect the approach walls and opening of the tunnel. Once construction of these walls had begun, petitioner noticed a marked decline in the volume of business she was doing and also in the profit from that business.
The record is devoid of any description of what the jury saw in their view and is also devoid of a number of alleged facts stated in the petitioner’s brief. For example, the petitioner asserts, “Ferry Street is very narrow and the way in the road is no more than 15 feet from curb to curb. It is similar to most every street in that part of the city [the North End], in that the sidewalks are very narrow, the buildings are placed near the line of the street, and the ways in the roads are very narrow.” We do not take judicial notice of the width of streets and sidewalks in the North End of Boston, for, by doing so, we should logically take notice of the width, and perhaps the length, of every street in the Commonwealth. The petitioner also states in her brief: “The jury could have concluded that, once a motor vehicle had driven to the petitioner’s premises, it could leave only by backing the length of the street [Ferry Street] to Fulton Street and then backing into and through the intersection and around the corner, and thereby violating the law. ’ ’ There is nothing in the record to indicate that it is illegal to back into a through street from a dead-end side street. This is not a matter for judicial notice.
The petitioner contends that the “direction of a verdict for the respondent upon the pleadings and the opening was reversible error . . . since the respondent was bound by its stipulation in a pre-trial order that the ‘pleadings are complete. ’ ” We reject this contention. We are of opin
Since the petitioner’s property was not taken, the petitioner may recover damages for any injury which she may have suffered as a result of the respondent’s acts only when that injury is “special and peculiar” within the meaning of Gr. L. c. 79, § 12.
We are of opinion that the cases cited by the petitioner are distinguishable on their facts from the ease at bar. Even the case of Wine v. Commonwealth, 301 Mass. 451, which we think closest in analogy to the instant case is clearly distinguishable. In that case the highway on which the petitioner operated a gasoline filling station was entirely closed to traffic. Although we held that the damage to the petitioner’s business as a result of the closing was special and peculiar, we do not believe that the rule can be applied to the situation where the street on which the petitioner’s property is located was closed only at one end.
Exceptions overruled.
The relevant part of this statute reads: “In determining the damages to a parcel of land injured when no part of it has been taken, regard shall be had only to such injury as is special and peculiar to such parcel . . ..”
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) Because a verdict was directed upon the petitioner’s opening before any testimony was heard, the record describes Ferry Street and the neighborhood only in somewhat general terms.
Our cases have been strict in confining the award of damages, in eminent domain cases and in cases of discontinuances of highways, to owners of land (a) actually taken in whole or in part, or (b) which has suffered some “special and peculiar” injury, not the same in kind as that suffered by the general public. See Hyde v. Fall River, 189 Mass. 439, 440.
Even giving our harsh rule its full scope, it has no fair application here. The petitioner, upon the inference which I draw from the opening, has been deprived of all reasonably convenient access to her property. In 1964 reasonable access to property adapted for use in the meat and provisions business requires that trucks and other motor vehicles shall be able to approach the property in a normal manner and that they shall not be forced to resort to the clumsy operation of backing up or down a narrow street. The conversion of this narrow through street into a dead-end street means that a normal forward entrance to the street or forward departure from it in a truck no longer mil be possible, unless a turn around space is provided, or unless, as in the
At least one case, applying the harsh Massachusetts rule, seems to have recognized that substantial impairment of “access to the system of public streets” may be material. See Holmes, J., in Stanwood v. Malden, 157 Mass. 17, 19, where, in denying recovery of damages for a street discontinuance, the opinion states the rule: ‘ ‘ The proposition on which Smith v. Boston [see fn. 2, supra] was decided was, that, to lay a foundation under our statute for a claim of damages for discontinuing a highway, it is not enough to show that a shop has suffered by the diversion of travel, or that the owner finds travel less convenient at a distance from his place, if the access to the system of public streets remains substantially unimpaired” (emphasis supplied). See also Natick Gas Light Co. v. Natick, 175 Mass. 246, 252 (fn. 2, supra).
It seems to me that the present petitioner’s access to other public streets has been very substantially impaired. She can get to other streets only by backing vehicles on Ferry Street in one direction or the other. Backing a motor vehicle from a side street into a through street is likely to be inconvenient, difficult, and dangerous, if not also illegal. It is unrealistic to say in 1964 that the petitioner still has reasonable access to her land,
It is not necessary, in order to deal fairly with persons in the position of the petitioner, to rule that all victims of takings and highway discontinuances, whose properties suffer damage greatly disproportionate to that of other members of the general public, shall be entitled to recover damages. This case merely raises the question whether such a victim whose property is left with submarginal access to the general street system shall receive fair redress, or is to have her property taken, in a very real sense, without just compensation.
Hyde v. Fall River, 189 Mass. 439, dealt with a street forty feet wide. The statement in the opening in the present case, that “the only means of egress [from Ferry Street] was to back up the length of the street,” may be a sufficient distinction of fact between the Hyde case and the present case to make it unnecessary in this case to overrule the first point decided in the Hyde case (at p. 440), even if the majority were to adopt the view, which I urge, that reduction of the quality of access to property below the standard of reasonable, normal convenience necessarily constitutes special and peculiar damage. If this distinction is
I would sustain the exceptions.
The jury had taken a view prior to the opening, so they had some knowledge of the area. See Keeney v. Ciborowski, 304 Mass. 371, 372; Kairis v. Board of Appeal of Cambridge, 337 Mass. 528, 531. See also G. L. e. 234, § 35. Although the petition referred to a recorded plan of the taking, the plan was not submitted with the bill of exceptions. It is assumed that the plan has not been sufficiently incorporated by reference to be a part of the record.
The cases are collected in Nichols, Eminent Domain (3d ed.), § 6.42 [5]. See Smith v. Boston, 7 Cush. 254, 255-257 (instruction approved that the petitioner could recover no damages because of a street discontinuance where his land did not abut on the portion of the street so discontinued, subject to a
Many of the eases cited in fn. 2, supra, were decided prior to 1905, when Hyde v. Fall River, 189 Mass. 439, was decided. The facts of the later cases do not closely resemble the present situation. In 1905, motor traffic had hardly begun. There then was slight occasion to leave horsedrawn vehicles standing for unreasonably long periods in business areas. Our citizens had not then encountered the practical problem of controlling the nuisance of improper parking of vehicles which today so often impairs the easement of travel over city streets. See Loosian v. Goudreault, 335 Mass. 253, 255-256.
The effect of the majority decision is that the application of the harsh Massachusetts rule to a person in the position of this petitioner can be cured only by remedial legislation, despite the vast change of circumstances since the rule was first stated. Cf. Vigeant v. Postal Tel. Cable Co. 260 Mass. 335, 342-343. Compare also the overruling of the somewhat related decisional rule laid down in Rand v. Boston, 164 Mass. 354, by later decisions discussed in Howell v. New York, N. H. & H. R.R. 221 Mass. 169, 171-172.
The general public suffers little if at all, for any occasion for use of Ferry Street by the general public for ordinary travel has been removed entirely, and members of the public suffer no inconvenience, except on the rare occasions when they may have cause to visit premises on the street.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Lillian Tassinari vs. Massachusetts Turnpike Authority
- Cited By
- 20 cases
- Status
- Published