169 Iowa 449 | Iowa | 1915
— The district in question comprises about 2,200 acres of farm land. It comprises lands in sections 2, 3, and 4 in one township and in sections 32, 33, and 34 of the adjoining township on the north. The plaintiff is the owner of four 40-acre tracts within the district. Two of these are in section 34 and two in section 4. Assessment was made against him for benefit to 117 acres. The principal assessment was made against the N¥ % of the NE % of section 4 and was for $511. This assessment furnishes the principal point of attack as being excessive. The drainage improvement was a covered tile drain. Its actual cost was about $19,000. The plaintiff’s land was near the head of the water course but was servient to about 300 acres of dominant land. The outlet to the improvement was about a mile and a half from his lands. The course of the water was from north to south. The tile drain was of course constructed up-stream. It entered the plaintiff’s land at the lower line with a 20-inch tile and proceeded thrbugh his 40-acre tract with an 18-inch file, making about
“1. There was error in holding that the lands had been properly classified, the evidence showing, without dispute that the classification was contrary to the express requirements of-the statute.
“2. There was error in permitting the assessments of the two districts to be grouped in one assessment and this was jurisdictional.
“3. The decree is not supported by the evidence. The assessment appealed from should have been set aside or greatly reduced, and the decree is therefore erroneous and without foundation in the evidence.
“4. The comparison of plaintiff’s assessment with the assessments of other lands in the district shows that the assessment of plaintiff’s land is much too high.”
III. As already indicated, the principal complaint is directed against the amount of the assessment against the 40-acre tract above described.
It is undoubtedly true that the plaintiff was entitled to have consideration taken df the fa'ct that he already had a
“I know of the outlet on from the bridge, or at the bridge. The county tile seemed to be two feet lower than Obe’s tile, and they were both running, and Obe’s tile had washed out a hole down to the other tile.”
This is an important concession and tends to support the contention of the defense. The efficiency of plaintiff’s line was measured by the depth of his outlet. According to the
We think, therefore, that the trial court was justified in holding with the defendants at this point. We are likewise convinced that the plaintiff’s witnesses must have been in error at this point and that the grade line of the public drain is lower than that of the plaintiff’s drain.