149 Iowa 129 | Iowa | 1910
The Cedar River approaches the city of Waterloo from the northwest. As it nears the city boundary, the main channel sweeps around a bend tó the eastward, while a lesser channel, known in the record as the “cut-off,” flows across the neck of the bend and reunites with the larger stream within the city limits. The defendant’s line of railway emerges from the business portion of the city, and extends in a northwesterly direction crossing the cut-off above mentioned. At the time when the road was constructed, this point of crossing was outside of the city limits, but, since that date, the boundary of the municipality has been extended to include the locality in question and for some distance beyond. The island lying between the greater and lesser channels of the river con
The petition sets forth the matters and things herein-
(1) That the removal of the cut-off embankment for a space of eighty feet along the line of the fill will prevent any material increase of the flow of water upon the streets and grounds of the city in time of ordinary freshets.
(2) The dimensions of such opening should be eighty feet in length by fifteen feet in height.
(3) The location of the opening should be at the present channel of the cut-off. The type of construction recommended to provide for such opening is a through plate girder bridge eighty feet in length in the clear upon concrete abutments, the lowest member of which bridge not to be lower than the lowest member of the present steel railway bridge (over main channel) at San Souci Park.
(!) The estimated cost of such improvement is $7,500, and the time required for its completion ninety days.
On the coming in of this report, the court entered formal decree enjoining the defendant from maintaining the fill across the cut-off, unless the same be supplied with an opening therein at the present channel of eighty lineal feet along the line of the embankment and at least fifteen feet in height. The date of this entry was November 15, 1907, and the defendant was given time to March 1, 1908, to comply with the terms of the degree.
It is upon the ground that the damming of the stream creates a public nuisance that relief against it was granted by the trial court, and upon that ground we think it may be maintained. To say nothing of the effect of the overflows upon public comfort or public health, the statutory duty of the city to keep its streets in repair and free from obstruction, and from the inroads of flood waters, is sufficient grounds to justify its insistence upon the opening of the channel to the natural flow of the stream. The fact that the fill was constructed before the city limits were
Eor the reasons stated, the decree is affirmed.