173 Iowa 441 | Iowa | 1916
The appellant relies at this point upon our former cases of Corbin v. Wisconsin I. & N. R. Co., 66 Iowa 269, and Keokuk & N. W. R. Co. v. Donnell, 77 Iowa 221, wherein similar testimony was held admissible. In each of these cases, the railway company had acquired peaceable possession of its right of way under an alleged agreement with the owner concerning compensation. Ignoring such agreement, the land owner afterward instituted ad quod damnum proceedings. It was held in each of such cases that it was permissible to the railway company to show such agreement in defense of the proceeding instituted by the landowner. The argument here is that, if such evidence was admissible in those cases, it is admissible herein. In the case before us, the railway company initiated -the ad quod damnum proceeding, and thereby caused the damages to be first assessed by sheriff’s jury. From this assessment, the plaintiff appealed to the district court. The question then is: Can the railway company resort to an
If the defendant had a valid agreement with the plaintiff, such as it offered to prove, it was, of course, entitled to its enforcement. It had abundant remedy to that end, either by specific enforcement or by quieting title or by action for damages. We think it clear that condemnation proceedings cannot be resorted to affirmatively as a means of specific enforcement of an alleged contract. The cited cases did not recognize such affirmative remedy, and we are not willing to go further in that direction than we have already gone.
This conclusion is determinative of the question presented, arid we need not deal with the other phases of the
The district court properly excluded the offered evidence. Its order is, therefore, — Affirmed.