184 Iowa 346 | Iowa | 1918
I. Appellants complain of several rulings of the court in the admission of evidence upon the question of damages; hut, after a careful examination thereof, we are unable to see how, if erroneous, they could have had any prejudicial effect. The objections urged involve the weight and credibility, rather than the admissibility, of evidence.
II. Evidence was received tending to show that the proposed new drainage district included a portion of the right of way of an old district known as Drainage District No. 16, and that the remaining course thereof followed the line of a private ditch, previously constructed by the owner of the land of appellee. '
The presence of a private ditch, upon the land taken for such right of way, did not, in any sense, deprive her of the right to compensation for the value of the land taken. The jury, in arriving at the fair value of the land, should have. considered its condition as affected by the private ditch. If the improvement in' question is one for which credit should be allowed by the commissioners, that is a matter for their consideration, independent of the fair value of the land appropriated for the ditch right of way, or the amount to be awarded as damages therefor.
The case was tried by counsel upon both sides upon the theory that the feasibility of leveling the waste banks and the expense thereof were proper matters to be considered, in fixing the amount of plaintiff’s recovery. Evidently, the instruction was based upon this theory of the case, and to meet the evidence offered upon this point. Had the instruction embodied the thought of counsel, it would have been manifestly erroneous. While this court held, in Stuhr v. Butterfield, 151 Iowa 736, and in Barton v. Boie, 169 Iowa 706, that land taken for a ditch right of way is simply burdened with an easement, and, in the Barton case, that the owner retains the right to use the property in any way not inconsistent with the carrying out of the plans of the drainage district, yet this should not be construed to mean that the owner may, in all cases, enter upon the right of way and level the waste banks so as to reclaim the land for cultivation. Section 1989-a21, Code Supplement, 3913,
Further complaints of the court’s instruction are set forth in appellants’ motion for a new trial, but no. sufficient reason is shown why the same were not included in the exceptions taken before the instructions were read to the jury, as required by Section 3705-a, Supplement to the Code, 1913.
As we find no reversible error in the record, the judgment of the court below is — Affirmed.