34 Iowa 249 | Iowa | 1872
I. The answer of defendant denies all of the allegations of plaintiffs’ petition upon which are based their claim for the relief of a preliminary injunction. The equity of their bill is founded upon the following alleged facts: 1st. The navigable character of the slough in question ; 2d. The absence of authority from the .city for the construction of the railroad tracks, which are being built by defendant upon the street fronting plaintiffs’ lot; 3d. The existence in the city of the legal title to the street, to be held subject to the rights of the plaintiffs to the use of the same.
The answer explicitly denies that the slough is navigable, and avers that the city has authorized it to be filled itp, and sets out the authority derived from the city under which defendant is constructing its railroad. tracks sought to be enjoined. The alleged facts, essential to support plaintiffs’ right to the relief claimed, are thus denied. The power of the city to appropriate its streets and lands, devoted to
The fact that the street upon which the railroad tracks complained of are being constructed, separates plaintiffs’ lot from a navigable slough, or from the Mississippi river itself, does not deny the application of the doctrine just stated to this case. The land used by the defendant, and upon which its track is built, is either a part of the public street or lies between the street and the navigable slough. In the first instance, if it be a street, as we have seen, the city may permit it to be occupied by railroad tracks; if it be beyond the street, it is either the property of others or held by the city for public purposes. In neither case can plaintiff restrain its use by the railroad company, authority therefor having been had from the city or the owners. And it may be conceded that plaintiffs have the rights of riparian owners. In that case, the railroad company may appropriate the land between plaintiffs’ lot and the navigable water for the purpose of constructing its tracks. Tomlin v. Dubuque B. and M. R. R. Co., 32 Iowa, 106.
The right of plaintiffs to recover damages qn account of the construction of the railroad tracks complained of, is not denied or passed upon. While the petition alleges that no damages have been tendered to or paid plaintiffs, the answer was that defendant is ready and willing to pay all legal damages assessed against it in favor of plaintiffs. The petition shows no facts, as the insolvency of defendant or the like, upon which may be based a supposition that any amount of damages which plaintiffs may recover cannot be collected. If it be so that plaintiffs are entitled to damages for the acts complained of, that fact is not made,
From the consideration we have thus far given the case, it appears that the answer of defendant fully meets and denies all the equities of the petition. The injunction, was, therefore, properly refused. Anderson v. Reid, 11 Iowa, 178; Stevens v. Myers, id. 183; Taylor v. Dickinson, 15 id. 483.
II. A position of plaintiff’s council, as to the right of the city to authorize the filling up of the slough, demands and will receive brief attention.
The plaintiffs insist that, as the slough in front of their lot is a part of the Mississippi river, and is navigable, it is not competent for defendant, even under authority derived from the city, to fill it up, and thus destroy the highway, secured by repeated legislative acts of congress in the waters of that river; that the character of the river extends to all its parts, and that its arms, bayous and sloughs, which are navigable, are highways, and are protected by the numerous laws, treaties, and ordinances applicable to the river itself.
It appears from the bill and answer that the city of Dubuque was originally laid out under authority of an act of congress, upon,the west bank of the Mississippi river, its eastern boundary being the slough in question. For many years the levee, or public landing of the city, was upon the bank of this slough; but'that, in 1856, it was abandoned because of insufficient depth of water. Between the slough and the main channel of the river are low lands, divided by other sloughs, the title to which was acquired by the city from the United States, and afterward conveyed to the Dubuque Harbor Improvement Company, an incorporation which has -laid off into city blocks, lots, and streets all the land between plaintiffs’ lot and the main channel of' the river. The city has. authorized the. filling up of the slough, and the building of streets across the
The object of the many treaties, ordinances and statutes declaring the Mississippi river navagable confessedly was, to secure free transit upon its waters for the vessels of the people to whom the right of navigation therein was intended to be secured. These laws were not designed and do not operate to interfere with the authority of the States within whose jurisdiction it flows, to improve its navigation, or to do any other acts that will not affect prejudicially its free use for such purpose. They are not intended to abridge the power of the local governments to construct levees and dikes to confine the waters within its proper channel, to reclaim overflowed land, to construct wharves and streets upon its banks, whereby thp very use of navagation for which it is preserved may be the better enjoyed, nor do other acts, proper in the exercise of governmental authority, demanded by the interest of the people and the progress of the country, and not calculated to hinder the free navigation of the river. While the riparian owner may not interfere with the natural flow of the water in the sloughs and bayous, if another would be injured thereby,' such restriction is not imposed upon the State where the good of whole communities demands improve
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.