78 Iowa 28 | Iowa | 1889
II. Code, section 464, declares that cities “shall have the power to authorize or forbid the location or laying down of tracks for railways or street railways on all streets, alleys and public places; but no railway track can thus be located and laid down until after the injury to the property abutting upon the street, alley or public places upon which said railroad is proposed to be located has been ascertained and compensated” in the manner provided by law. Code, section 1262, provides that any railroad company “may raise or lower any * * * highway for the purpose of having its railway cross over or under the same.” Counsel for defendant insist that
III. Is the occupancy of a street in front of an abutting lot by a diagonal crossing within the contemplation of section 464? We think it is. A diagonal crossing may occupy a street for a distance which practically would have the same effect in injury to the abutting lot-owner as the longitudinal occupancy of the street. Suppose a square be occupied by making the diagonal crossing, the street for that distance is occupied by the railroad; indeed the angle of crossing may be so obtuse that many squares may be wholly occupied, yet the crossing will be diagonal in fact. In the case before us the street is occupied in front of plaintiff’s lob. He suffers the same injury which would result from a simple longitudinal occupancy, and should be