14 Iowa 572 | Iowa | 1863
The defendant appealed to the District Court from the inquest of a jury, appointed under the pro
The jury, in the heading of the report, say: “In the matter of the application of Le Grand Byington, for damages against the M. & M. R. R. Co.,” while in other respects the M. &. M. R. R. Co. are treated as the plaintiff and applicant for the assessment. The original notice or the agreement under which the jury were selected, is not in the record, and its omission justifies us in concluding that one of the questions presented by the counsel for appellant was correctly decided by the court below. While it appears from the return of the jury that they asséssed the damages at $1,000, in consequence of the location of the road across the specific portion of the defendant’s land, above named, yet it appears from their evidence that they took into consideration the injuries to the whole of defendant’s farm, embracing land, not only the specific section named in the report, but lands adjoining thereto. So, also, upon the trial anew in the District Court, the defendant was permitted to introduce evidence tending to show the amount of damages the location of the road was to his farm, and not to the particular tract specified in the report of the jury. To this the plaintiff objected, and its admission is assigned as error. The plaintiff also proposed to introduce evidence tending to show that the defendant was not the owner of a portion of the land known as the defendant’s farm. This
The presumption is, that the court admitted the evidence to assess the damages as contemplated when the sheriff’s jury was summoned, and to rebut this, the appellant should show that it was the intention of the parties to have the damages confined to the particular tract.
We feel satisfied from the record and evidence that it was the damages to the farm the jury were called to assess, from the fact that the record shows that when the jury were about entering upon the discharge of their duties, the plaintiffs’ attorneys were present, as also a surveyor, and each of the jurors 'testify that in assessing the damages, they did not confine themselves to the particular tract embraced in their report, but made their estimate from the injury to the farm.
When the jurors returned their assessment, the plaintiffs paid to the sheriff the amount of their award for the use of defendant. This amount was accepted and receipted for by the defendant, after which he appealed. The plaintiffs moved the court to dismiss the appeal, for the reason that the defendant, by the acceptance of the amount tendered, was barred from the further prosecution of his claim for damages. This motion was overruled, and this is assigned as error.
"We are of the opinion that the provisions of our statute in relation to appeals in this special class of cases, does not change the well settled rules upon this subject. We think ■ it a'correct rule of law, and well settled by the authorities, that a party cannot accept the benefit of an adjudication and yet allege it to be erroneous. And it matters not as to the character of the tribunal, whether that of a justice of the peace, the District Court, or a proceeding as in this case, by a jury for the assessment of damages.
Other questions are presented by the counsel of appellant, but as by the acceptance of the amount of the award of the jury, the appellee waived his right to appeal, it is not important to pass upon the other rulings objected to.
Reversed.