99 Iowa 496 | Iowa | 1896
I. The only ■ evidence offered and introduced was that of Ordinances Nos. 91, 95, and 149 of the defendant city, and an agreement in open court that the defendants were attempting to and would enforce said Ordinance No. 149, unless restrained. It is upon these ordinances, this admission, and the admission in the pleadings, that the case must be determined. The • ordinances are lengthy, and” we will only set out so much thereof as is material to this case. Ordinance No. 91 took effect January 80, 1890, and section 22 is as follows: “That there be and is hereby granted unto the Oskaloosa Street Railway and Land Company the right of way and privilege to lay down tracks in and upon any of the streets of the city of Oskaloosa, which shall constitute a single and continuous line of street railway from and to certain points, which shall be designated and platted by said company, and the plat approved by the city council, and said route, when designated and approved, shall be published as a part of this ordinance; and no rights shall accrue to said company until their line is so platted and approved by the city council. And said company shall have authority to construct, maintain, and operate street railways over and along their said route, for the transportation of passengers and freight, for the term of twenty years from and after, the approval of their line as aforesaid by the city council.” Section 4 contains the following: “When the city council shall cause that portion of said streets corresponding with and opposite to said tracks to
“Section 1. If any street railway shall hereafter desire to lay its .tracks upon any streets, or part of streets that are now paved, or to be hereafter paved, it shall first pay into the city treasury its pro rg,ta share or' cost of said paving, not to exceed six feet in width. Said cost shall be pro rata, and determined by the original cost of the paving over which said street railway may pass.
“Sec. 2. If any street railway shall fail to comply with the provisions of section (1) one of this ordinance, the tracks passing over, said paved streets or parts of streets, shall be considered as an obstruction upon said streets; and power is hereby given to the street commissioner of the city of Oskaloosa, and it is hereby made his duty, to remove said street railway.”
Code, section 2665, provides that “there shall be no reply, except (1) where a counter-claim is alleged; or (2) wherG some matter is alleged in the answer to whioh the plaintiff claims to have a defense, by the reason of the existence of some fact which avoids the matter alleged in the answer.”