131 Iowa 468 | Iowa | 1906
Prior to the year 1870 the Iowa Central Railway Company procured the right of way for a railroad between the towns of Albia and Moulton in the State of Iowa. After grading the roadbed the title thereto was transferred to the Central Railroad Company of Iowa. Not being used or operated by said company, the said right of way was in July, 1879, taken possession of and condemned by the Moulton & Albia Railroad Company, which laid its tracks thereon and operated the same or a portion thereof as a railway until the year 1888, and then abandoned its further use. In the year 1898. the Iowa Central Railway Company undertook to condemn the said right of way anew, instituting the proceedings by application to the sheriff of the proper county and notice to the owners of the several -tracts of land affected thereby. Numerous assessments or awards of damages were made in these proceedings by the sheriff’s jury. From most of these awards the railway company appealed to the district court, and from some of them the landowners also appealed. In the district court the railway company filed pleadings,
The foregoing history will assist materially in making clear some of the features in the controversy now at bar. The plaintiff herein, A. A. Mason, was the owner of several tracts of land situate in sections 22 and 27, township 72, range 17 in Monroe county, immediately adjoining the city of Albia, and across which the right of way was sought to be condemned. Notices of such proceedings were served upon him as to these several tracts, and for the sake of convenience we will hereafter designate these several proceedings by numbers as 1, 2, and 3. Numbers 1 and 2 applied solely to tracts of land in section 22 and number 3 to a forty-acre tract of land known as “ the homestead ” in section 27. Some complication or uncertainty is now suggested as to the real ownership of tract No. 1, but the condemnation was prosecuted against Mason as the owner, and the uncertainty referred to in no manner affects the result in this case. The record shows that in proceeding No. 1 the sheriff’s jury assessed plaintiff’s damages at $125, and in No. 2 at $350. In No. 3, which applied to the homestead tract in section 27 there is no record evidence that any finding or assessment of damages was ever made. In all the other cases the sheriff, being notified of the appeal, filed certified copies of the appraise
Appeals were also taken by both parties from the award in No. 2 and by the company alone in No. 1. During the
In further explanation of this entry it should also be said that before these entries of judgment the plaintiff elected and had entered of record his election to accept the awards made by the sheriff’s jury, with interest, thus in effect abandoning or dismissing his appeals and leaving the cases pending on the company’s appeals alone. No entry of any kind was made in condemnation No. 3 after the minute noting the order of consolidation above mentioned. This omission doubtless has its explanation in the fact that there was nothing whatever in the record upon which to enter any finding or judgment.
We have failed to mention at its proper place in the chronological order of events the fact that at some time prior to the entry of the judgments aforesaid the company filed two answers in .the consolidated proceedings; one being designated as applying to both cases 3,778 and 3,785 (being the two appeals in condemnation No. 2), and the other as applying to both case 3,780 (condemnation No. 1) and 3,784 (condemnation No. 3). Whether this coupling in one pleading an answer to the demand for damages to two separate tracts
In September, after the entry of the judgments aforesaid in April, 1902, the railway company deposited with the sheriff the sum of $115.65, being the amount of interest accrued on the $475 originally deposited, taking his receipt therefor and describing this last payment as being “ for the difference between the damages awarded by the commissioners in condemnation proceedings and damages awarded on appeal by jury in the district court of Monroe, Iowa, in the cases of A. A. Mason v. Iowa Central, 3,778 and 3,780, for right of way over N. W. % of N. W. % of section 27 — 72 —17; also the S. W. % of the S. W. section 22 — 72 —17, Monroe county, Iowa, Hocking Branch.” Here, too, it will be observed that the district court cases mentioned in this voucher as Nos. 3,778 and 3,780.involve only condemnations Nos. 1 and 2, which, have reference solely to lands in section 22, but in extending the description the voucher is made to appear to include or cover damages to land in section 27. No person representing the plaintiff was present at the making and delivery of this voucher. Thereafter, the plaintiff refusing to give any receipt or voucher acknowledging payment of damages to land in section 27,. the sheriff paid over to him the deposit in his hands of $590.65, taking his receipt therefor in the following form: “ Received of John Doner, sheriff of Monroe county, Iowa, the sum of $590,65 in full payment for the damages awarded me by the
Prior to this time it was discovered by plaintiff or his counsel that no record of any condemnation of the land in section 27 existed, and they insisted that the damages to said tract remained unadjudicated and unsettled. The company refusing to accede to this position, and claiming that the sum of $590.65 paid by it was in satisfaction of all claims for damage to all of defendant’s land, the plaintiff on July 28, 1903, instituted new proceedings to have his said damages assessed. Prom the appraisement made and returned by the sheriff’s jury the company appealed to the district court, where it filed an answer setting up its version of the history of the prior condemnations, the substance of which is hereinbefore set out, and alleges that! plaintiff is thereby estopped to maintain this proceeding. It further alleges that the sum of $590.65 aforesaid was paid and received by plaintiff in full settlement and satisfaction of all his claims for damages. The cause seems to have been tried to the court as in equity, and at the close of the testimony the court entered a decree for the defendant, dismissing the proceedings and taxing the costs to plaintiff. Prom this decree the plaintiff has appealed. This extended and perhaps ■ tedious statement of the facts having direct or collateral bearing upon the merits of this appeal renders unnecessary further reference to the testimony except in a few matters of detail.
We conclude that appellant is not estopped to demand an assessment of the damages caused by the condemnation of appellee’s right of way across his homestead, and that the decree of the district court denying, such right must be, and is, reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in harmony with this opinion.— Reversed.