188 Iowa 448 | Iowa | 1920
The governor thereupon appointed an engineer, to examine the situation or condition of the lake or lake bed, to make a survey and plat thereof, and to ascertain whether its location is such that it can be drained and improved. The engineer was instructed to make a full report to the council of the area, depth of water in the lake, and its general physical condition, accompanying his report with his plat, field notes, and profile of his survey. This was done, and, upon the report of the engineer, the executive council determined that said lake bed should not be maintained or preserved as the property of the state; that it should be drained, improved, and the land included within the meandered lines thereof sold. Upon the question of preserving and maintaining the lake, and on the question as to whether it should be drained, improved, and sold, evidence was taken and submitted to the executive council. It was upon the evidence so submitted that the council determined' that it should be drained, improved, and the bed of the lake sold. The council must have determined that it was to the interest of the state and the general public that the lake bed should be drained and sold. Upon such determination, it sold the lake bed before the same was drained. The lake bed was platted and sold, and the rights of the state in and to the same conveyed by deeds. All the land so conveyed
Though these matters are not set out in the petition, we are told in the petition, to which demurrer was filed, that the land was platted and sold by the state of Iowa under the authority of said chapter. We must assume that all was regularly done by the executive council before sale was made of the lots in the bed of the lake, and we must assume that the investigation preceding the sale, and all that was done under the chapter up to the time of the sale, was done in accordance with and in fulfilment of the spirit and purpose of the act under which the council proceeded.
We herewith submit a plat of Pratt Lake, and of the territory surrounding it.
This plat shows the land owned by the plaintiff, and shows that only a portion of the land owned by plaintiff bordered on the lake as it originally existed. This land
The question presented is whether or not, under the facts as they appear in this case, plaintiff is entitled to be allowed anything as damages on account of the draining of the lake.
The right of the legislature to confer upon the executive 'council power to drain meandered lakes within the state, is not questioned in this case. Indeed, the whole argument assumes the right in the legislature to authorize
Section 1 authorized and empowered tbe executive council of tbe state to survey tbe meandered lakes and lake beds witbin tbe state, and sell tbe same, as hereinafter provided, and to determine what lakes shall be maintained as the property of tbe state, and what meandered lake beds, belonging to tbe state, may be drained, improved, demised, or sold.
Section 2 provides that, upon tbe presentation of a statement signed by not less than 50 freeholders (having tbe qualifications provided for in tbe act), stating that any meandered lake or lake bed in such pounty is detrimental to the public health or tbe general welfare of tbe citizens of tbe county, and that it is unwise to maintain such meandered lake or lake bed as a permanent body of water, and that tbe interest of tbe state will be subserved by draining and improving such lake bed, tbe. governor shall, witbin a specified time thereafter, appoint a competent engineer, who shall examine tbe situation or condition of tbe lake or lake bed, make a survey and plat thereof, and ascertain whether its location is such that it can be drained or improved, and make a full report to said council of tbe area, depth of water in tbe lake, and its general physical condition, accompanying bis report with his plat, field notes, and profile of bis survey.
Section 8 provides that, upon receipt of tbe report of the engineer, tbe executive council shall determine whether such lake or lake bed shall be maintained or preserved as tbe property of the state, or whether tbe same shall be drained and improved, and tbe land included witbin tbe
Section 4 provides that if, upon such hearing, the executive council determines that the lake or lake bed ought not to be drained, demised, or sold, the same shall be kept and maintained as the property of the state, for the benefit of the general public. But if the council determines that it is to the interest of the state and the general public that the lake or lake bed, concerning which the statement is presented, be drained, improved, demised, or sold, it may permit the same to be drained, under the provisions of the drainage law of the state.
Section 5 provides that, in the event the executive council determines that the lake or lake bed should be drained, improved, demised, or sold, it shall have the right, either before or after such lake or lake bed is drained, to sell and convey, by deed or patent, the land lying within the meander lines of such lake or lake bed; and authority is given to the executive council to make such sale or sales in behalf of the state.
Section 6 provides that, after the lake or lake bed has been surveyed, and the land within the meander lines subdivided, and a plat filed with the secretary of state, the county auditor of the county in which the lake or lake bed is situated shall have the same appraised by a commission (designating the parties eligible to act upon the commission) .
Section 7 provides that, after the appraisement has been so made, received, and filed, the executive council shall offer the land composing such lake bed, and included in such survey and appraisement, for sale, and shall give to the abutting property owners the first right to purchase.
Under this statute, the plaintiff’s lots were sold by the 'executive council. We take it, therefore, that, before this
“Acts done in the proper exercise of governmental powers, and not directly encroaching upon private property, though their consequences may impair its use, are universally held not to be a taking, within the meaning of the constitutional provision. * * *• It is the very essence of government, and fundamentally so, that private rights shall at all times be held subordinate to the public good. And to this every citizen is held, as byv imperative decree, to haVe given his consent.”
There is no doubt that, when plaintiff bought these lots in the lake bed, it was with the thought that the waters above the lots belonged to the state, and would be drained away. The lots themselves would be of no value to the plaintiff unless the water was removed therefrom. In the purchase of the lots, he is held to have consented to the scheme inaugurated by the executive council for the drainage of the waters off these lots, and he cannot be heard to complain that the purpose inaugurated by the executive council, under the authority of the statute,, which he assented to in the purchase of these lots, has been carried out, nor can he base any claim for damages resting upon that ground. The sale of these lots by the state and the purchase by the plaintiff was in contemplation of the very thing he now objects to, and upon the-doing of which he predicates his right to damages. The state sold the lake bed, not as a lake bed, but as land, and plaintiff bought it as land, properly platted and laid out, and not as a lake bed. The land, as such, became valuable only upon drainage, and could only be drained by opening channels from the lake through which', by the action of gravity, the water would be removed. The act itself provides that the lake bed — not the lake — may be sold before drainage. Drainage is the principal thing. The sale of the land was made in contemplation of drainage. By the act of purchase, the
Upon this record, we find that plaintiff had no vested interests in the waters of the lake, entitling him to have the lake maintained in statu quo for his benefit, based simply on the ground that he owned lands abutting upon the lake. We find that, in purchasing these lots in the lake, after they had been platted, and after the continuation of the lake had been condemned by the executive council, as inimical to the best interests of the public, plaintiff consented that the waters be drained from the land purchased, the effect of which was to remove the water from his property abutting upon the lake.
Upon the whole record, we think the court was right in denying plaintiff any claim for damages, and its action is— Affirmed.