115 Iowa 683 | Iowa | 1901
Appellee’s position is that damages • for a change of grade are indivisible, that they must all be recovered for in one action, and that, when a claim Avas made and damages paid for injury done under the ordinance of 1886, such settlement cowered all claims resulting from a completion of the work therein provided for. It is doubtless true that for a single change in the surface óf a street the damages are indivisible. So, too, if, after the passage of this ordinance, the city had proceeded under section 469, Code 1873, to have appraisers appointed and damages to the property assessed, the property owner would at once have had a right of action for all injury that might be occasioned by bringing the streets to the level fixed by the ordinance. Conklin v. City of Keoleuk, 73 Iowa, 343. But in that case it will be noticed the action was not begun by the property owner. The city proceeded under the statute mentioned, and the case came into court through an appeal from the award of damages by the appraisers. There is a manifest distinction betAveen the cases where the property owner sues before he is injured, and where the city determines in advance that it will carry
Por the reasons given, we think the case should have gone to the jury. The judgment of the district court is therefore reversed.