61 Iowa 11 | Iowa | 1883
“Seo. 464. The council shall also have power to authorize or forbid the location or laying down of tracks for railways and street railways on all streets, alleys and public places.”
“Sec. 527. The city council shall have the care, preservation and control of all public highways, bridges, streets, al
“Sec. 1262. Any such corporation may raise or lower any turnpike, plank road, or other highway, for the purpose of having its railway cross over or under the same, and, in such casé, said corporation shall put such highway, as soon as may be, in as good repair and condition as before such alteration at such place of crossing.” ^
It is insisted that section 527 of the Code requires the council to keep all alleys open and in repair, and that no authority can be conferred, under section 464, to lay a railway track in an alley, if it will have the effect to close the alley for the purposes contemplated in its dedication, so that it cannot be kept open. It is evident, however, that this process of reasoning would nullity so much of section 464 as empowers the council to authorize the laying of a railway track in an alley, for the width o'f alleys in all of our cities is such that the construction and operation of a railway therein must interfere, to a greater or less extent, with the ordinary use of the alley. These sections must be so construed, if possible, as to give force and effect to both. This may be done by holding that the duty of beeping the alleys open and free from all nuisances applies to all obstructions, exceq>t those which the city is specifically empowered to authorize. The protection to the owner of adjoining property is found in other provisions of section 464, which provides that “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 such railway track is proposed to be located and laid down, had been ascertained and couqDensated, in the manner provided for taking private property for works of internal improvement in chapter 4 of title 10 of the Code of 1873.”
The appellee further relies upon section 1262 of the Code, and insists that it is unreasonable to provide that a railway cannot cross over or under a.highway without putting it in
This doctrine of equitable control originated from the construction which had been placed upon section 1321 of the Revision, that a railroad might occupy a street lengthwise, without the consent of the city, or the payment of damages. The doctrine has no application to section 464 of the Code, which requires both the consent of the city and the payment of damages. Under the exercise of the right of eminent domain the defendant, upon the payment of the damages occasioned, might appropriate the plaintiff’s mill or elevator, or both of them. A court of equity could not restrain the de
It is said, however, that this court recognizes the right to exercise equitable control after the adoption of section 464 of the Code, in the case of Davis v. The C. & N. W. R’y Co., 46 Iowa, 389. That case arose in the city of Council Bluffs, which was operating under a special charter, and at a time when section 464 of the Code did not apply to such cities. See Acts of Eighteenth General Assembly, chapter 96. Many authorities have been cited by appellee as to the right of a railroad company to occupy the streets in a city with its tracks, but we think that question is determined in this state by the provisions of section 464 of the Code. Whether under the provisions of this section the city council could surrender a street entirely to the use of a railroad company, is not presented in this case. The difference between the uses of a street and of an alley is apparent to all, and needs only to be suggested.
In our opinion the injunction was improperly granted.
Reversed.