Demueles v. St. Paul & Northern Pacific Ry. Co.

Decision Date01 November 1890
Citation44 Minn. 436
PartiesZEPHERIN DEMUELES <I>vs.</I> ST. PAUL & NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY.
CourtMinnesota Supreme Court

H. C. Truesdale, for appellant.

D. A. Secombe, for respondent.

DICKINSON, J.

The plaintiff, the owner of a lot of land situate on the east side of Ramsey street in the city of Minneapolis, prosecutes this action to recover damages for injury to the property caused by the construction and operation of a railroad along the west half of the street, opposite the premises of the plaintiff. After trial and a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, the court granted a new trial for the reason, as expressed in its order, that it was considered that in the charge to the jury the court "did not fully state the law relating to the rights of the plaintiff in and to the street in front of the premises of plaintiff, and applicable to the evidence in this case, whereby the jury might be, and probably were, misled as to the amount of plaintiff's damages." We are not informed, save by this general reference to the charge, as to the particulars in respect to which the court deemed its charge to have been defective or misleading; and we can only infer what this may have been from a reading of the whole instruction in connection with the evidence. It seems probable that one of the matters thus referred to was an instruction that the rule of damages was the difference between the rental value of the property "as it now stands, with the railroad constructed upon the street, and what the value would be were the railroad track not there." While it was probably not intended to convey the meaning which this language, unqualified, seems to bear, the court was reasonably justified in the apprehension that the jury may have been led to suppose that damages might be assessed for such diminution of the rental value as may have resulted from the construction and maintenance of the railroad in that street, and not merely in that part of the street opposite the plaintiff's premises. Thus understood, the instruction would have been erroneous. Adams v. Chicago, Burlington & Northern R. Co., 39 Minn. 286, (39 N. W. Rep. 629.) The granting of new trials being largely a matter of judicial discretion, the order in this case should be sustained for the...

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