This is an appeal from an order by the district court dismissing an action for declaratory judgment and injunctive relief filed in response to the condemnation of land. We affirm.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
Dean Owens is the brother of Donna Brownlie. Their family has owned a 200-acre farm in Benton County since 1928. It was originally owned by Dean and Donna’s grandparents, and later by their parents. After the death of their father in 1967, the land continued to be owned by their mother and was farmed by John Brownlie. John is Donna’s husband.
The land passed to Dean and Donna in 1995 following the death of their mother. Dean inherited the southern 100 acres while Donna inherited the northern 100 acres.
The 200-acre tract was bordered on the east by the Benton-Linn Road. A public road also bordered the property to the south. Farm land owned by third parties bordered the property to the west and the north. A creek, known as Dry Creek, runs diagonally across the tract from the northeast corner of the land to the western half of the southern border. Most of the northern tract inherited by Donna lies west of Dry Creek.
Contrary to its name, water runs through Dry Creek at various levels depending upon the time of the year and the amount of rainfall. The creek is generally seven to nine feet wide with water at a minimum level of three inches in the fall of the year. The water level is around eighteen inches in springtime. For the most part, the creek has steep banks. After a heavy rain, the creek can rise to levels in excess of five feet and spill over the banks. The creek normally rises over its banks several times each year.
Over the years, the Owens family gained access with their farm equipment to the land west of Dry Creek by three methods. One method was to enter from the public road running along the southern border. Another means was to cross over the *864 neighbor’s land to the north. The third' method was to cross through a shallow area of the creek in the northern portion of the land where the banks of the creek slope.
Over time, the access point through the creek was discontinued. It was last used in 1967. A grove of trees subsequently grew in the area and the creek has started to produce steeper banks. Additionally, the crossing over the neighbor’s land to the north was lost years ago. This , land had been owned by Dean and Donna’s uncle, who permitted the crossing. The land is now owned by a third person.
After the land was divided into north and south tracts, the Brownlies believe they did not have ingress or egress to their land west of Dry Creek. They instituted a condemnation proceeding seeking to acquire a public way over Owens’ land for the purpose of ingress arid egress.' They alleged in their condemnation application that their property was land locked, and sought to condemn a 100-yard path along the western border of Owens’ land to the public road running along the southern border of the land.
The Brownlies presented their application for condemnation to the chief judge of the sixth judicial district. This is the judicial district in' which the property is located. The judge appointed a condemnation commission to assess the value of the strip of land sought to be condemned. Owens was notified of the time and date in which the commission would view his land to' assess the damages.
The land was appraised by the commission at $2740. Owens subsequently filed a petition seeking a declaratory judgment that the Brownlies were not authorized to condemn the land. Owens also sought permanent and temporary injunctive relief. He claimed the Brownlies had reasonable access to the land west of Dry Creek by simply crossing through the creek. Prior to trial, Owens amended his petition to include allegations of fraud and illegality based upon deficiencies in the application for condemnation. He also claimed he was denied due process because of the lack of notice prior to the appointment of the condemnation commission.
Owens acknowledged at trial that the area of the creek formerly used as a crossing could not presently accommodate farm equipment. However, he believed the old creek crossing could be restored by removing the trees, grading the banks, and installing a rock or gravel bed. Owens indicated his father was able to transport all of his farm equipment over the area when it was used as a crossing prior to 1967. Owens also believed the Brownlies could install a large culvert or construct a bridge over the creek, but offered no evidence of the cost of such a project.
John Brownlie farmed the 200-acre tract for nearly thirty years prior to the time it was divided into north and south sections. He testified at trial that the creek has changed since the Owens family used it as a crossing. It now handles a greater volume of water due to increased tiling which runs into the creek from farms upstream. The creek bottom contains deep silt and loose sand, and the ground around the banks is frequently wet and swampy.
Brownlie also testified farming practices and machinery have changed dramatically since the Owens family used the creek as a crossing. The machinery is much bigger and heavier. Brownlie believed his planter in particular would be damaged by driving it through the creek, and grain trucks would be unable to traverse any crossing.
Brownlie further opined that the force of the water at certain times of the year would wash out a rock bed, and the depth of the water level at various times of the year would require an elaborate bridge or culvert system. He believed the cost of a bridge or culvert crossing would be more than the value of the land.
The district court denied the request for injunctive relief and found the Brownlies *865 did not have reasonable access to their land west of Dry Creek and were entitled to condemn Owens’ land to gain a public way. Owens appeals.
II. Scope of Review.
We review declaratory judgment actions according to the manner the case was tried in the district court.
Smith v. Bertram,
III. Eminent Domain.
Eminent domain is the power of a government to take private property for public use conditioned upon the payment of just compensation.
Hinrichs v. Iowa State Highway Comm’n,
An eminent domain action is recog nized as a special proceeding.
Richardson v. City of Centerville,
Once the award is made by the condemnation commission, either the condemner or condemnee may appeal the assessment to the district court. Iowa Code § 6B.18;
Burnham v. City of West Des Moines,
IY. Challenge to Authority to Condemn as Owner of Land Locked Property.
Owens initially claims the Brownlies had no underlying right to condemn his land because their property was not land locked. His claim is based on two arguments. First, he asserts land cannot be land locked under section 6A.4(2) as long as a portion of the overall tract of the land is accessible from a public road. Second, he argues the Brownlies have reasonable access to their land west of Dry Creek.
A. Burden of Proof. .
Before addressing the factual basis for condemnation, we must consider the procedural posture- in which the challenge is made. Owens requested declaratory and injunctive relief in response to the condemnation of his land. The burden of proof in a declaratory judgment action is the same as in an ordinary action at law or equity.
North Liberty Land Co. v. Incorporated City of North Liberty,
B. Land Locked Property.
The language of section 6A.4(2) authorizes condemnation when a landowner has “no public or private way to the lands.” Iowa Code § 6A.4(2). The statute does not expressly define whether condemnation is authorized when only a portion of the land is claimed to be without “public or private way.” However, we recognize the goal of the statute authorizing condemnation by an owner of land locked property is to solve the problem of access to the property.
Luloff I,
A natural obstruction can be so obtrusive that it essentially creates two separate tracts of land.
See Anderson v. Lee,
C. Reasonable Necessity.
A landowner is only authorized to condemn an access way to a public road or private land under section 6A.4(2) if there is no existing private or public access to the land.
Luloff I,
We have never squarely addressed the issue of when a natural obstruction over private land makes a portion of the land inaccessible for the purposes of condemnation. Other jurisdictions offer a host of views.
See Ex parte Cater,
— So.2d -, -,
Owens argues a landowner should have no right to condemn under section 6B.4(2) if the owner is able to get to property however inconvenient or costly the access may be. This absolute necessity standard has been followed in some jurisdictions. See 26 Am.Jur.2d Eminent Domain § 75, at 512-13 (1996). Other jurisdictions, however, follow a less stringent standard of reasonable necessity, and permit condemnation if providing private access between *868 two tracts would be extremely inconvenient or impractical, or cost-prohibitive. Id.
We have previously recognized that an existing right of access to defeat the right of condemnation for an access route must be reasonably adequate for the intended purpose.
Luloff I,
“If one has a way through his'own land, he cannot impose a ‘way of necessity’ through his neighbor’s land, unless his own way is not reasonably adequate or its cost is prohibitive. Mere inconvenience or mere cost, as the basis for using another’s land to get access to one’s own property, falls short of meeting this test.”
Cater,
— So.2d at -,
The first inquiry is whether the land in its existing state provides reasonable access. Mere inconvenience does not establish lack of reasonable access. Instead, this standard considers the nature of the obstruction and all other surrounding circumstances, including the intended use of the land and the intended purpose for access.
See Luloff I,
If Reasonable access does not exist, the next inquiry is whether the land can be changed by the owner to provide reasonable access.
See Anderson,
Under the test of proportionality, a natural obstruction makes land privately inaccessible where the cost of making the land reasonably accessible is disproportionate to the value of the land.
See LeSatz v. Deshotels,
In considering the first inquiry in this case, Owens acknowledged there was no present access for farm machinery through the creek. Thus, the fighting issue is whether reasonable access can be gained by constructing a crossing through or over the creek at a reasonable cost under the test of proportionality.
Upon our review of all the evidence, we find Owens failed to prove the Brownlies’ property is not land locked. The evidence offered by Owens to support the claim that reasonable access can be gained by making modifications to the creek was speculative. There was no evidence of the cost of constructing a bridge or culvert. The record also failed to reveal the value of the land west of the creek to compare to the cost of construction. Additionally, the Brownlies offered evidence to create sufficient doubt over the feasibility of the improvements proposed by Owens. Owens failed to meet his burden of proof.
V. Challenge to the Application For Condemnation.
Owens claims the entire proceedings were rendered null and void because the condemnation application failed to set forth sufficient information to support an initial judicial determination that the property was land locked. He also claims the petition failed to disclose other relevant information that would have caused the application to be denied by the chief judge.
An applicant for condemnation must comply with the condemnation statute.
Aplin v. Clinton County,
We recognize the chief judge is required to make a quasi judicial determination of the legal sufficiency of the application and further determine the applicant is empowered to exercise condemnation.
See Johann,
*870
We conclude the application contained sufficient information for the chief judge to determine the Brownlies were authorized to condemn the land. In permitting the owners of land locked property to condemn land to establish a public way, our legislature has concluded that there is a public benefit for condemning land for access to land locked property.
Luloff I,
VI. Procedural Due Process Challenge.
Owens ■ claims the statutory condemnation scheme is procedurally defective because it fails to provide the con-demnee with notice and opportunity to be heard before the application is judicially approved.
Due process must be afforded where state action threatens to deprive an individual of a protected liberty or property interest.
Callender v. Skiles,
“(a) the private interests implicated; (b) the risk of an erroneous determination by reason of the process accorded and the probable value of added procedural safeguards; and (c) the public interest and administrative burdens, including costs that the additional procedure would involve.”
Skiles,
Owens argues he was denied due process when he was not given an opportunity to argue his opposition to the condemnation prior to the decision- by the chief judge to permit condemnation to proceed. However, a pre-determination hearing is not required to satisfy due process. Rather, the hearing must “be granted at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.”
Fuentes v. Shevin,
Owens was afforded ample notice and opportunity to submit his opposition to the proposed condemnation. For example, he was notified of the appointment of a Condemnation Commission and the date of the assessment of his property two days after the chief judge granted Brownlie’s application, and over three weeks prior to the assessment. Shortly after the assessment, Owens filed a "petition in equity seeking declaratory judgment and an injunction. The Brownlies filed a motion to dismiss in response to this petition, upon which the court heard oral arguments. Owens was able to present evidence to the court and *871 cross-examine Brownlies’ witnesses at this hearing. The court ruled in favor of Owens on the Brownlies’ motion to dismiss. There was an additional hearing on Owens’ request for a temporary injunction. Finally, there was a trial to the court on Owens’ petition in equity.
When a hearing is afforded, “due process demands contestants be given notice thereof sufficient to permit a reasonable opportunity to appear and assert their rights.”
Hyde v. Anania,
VII. Conclusion.
On our de novo review, we find Owens failed to establish the Brownlies had a public or private way to their land west of Dry Creek. We conclude the procedure for condemnation does not violate the Due Process Clause under the state or federal constitutions in light of the opportunity provided for a hearing to challenge the right to condemn land.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The recent amendments to chapter 6B, not applicable to this case, now provide for notice and good faith negotiations for the purchase of the land before filing an application for condemnation. See 1999 Iowa Acts ch. 171, §§ 3, 4.
.Iowa Code section 6B.3 sets forth the requirements for an application for condemnation. They include:
1. A description of all the property in the county, affected or sought to be condemned, by its congressional numbers, in tracts not exceeding one-sixteenth of a section, or, if the land consists of lots, by the numbers of the lot and block, and plat designation.
2. A plat showing the location of the right-of-way or other property sought to be condemned with reference to such description.
3. The names of all record owners of the different tracts of land sought to be condemned, or otherwise affected by the proceedings, and of all record holders of liens and encumbrances on such lands; also the place of residence of all such persons so far as known by the applicant.
4. The purpose for which condemnation is sought.
5. A request for an appointment of a commission to appraise the damages.
Iowa Code § 6B.3(l)-(5).
.The Code editor transferred Iowa Code section 472.3 to section 6B.3 in 1993.
. In
Fuentes,
the Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional two prejudgment replevin statutes that did not provide for a pre-deprivation hearing.
Fuentes,
. The process established by the legislature for the condemnation of another's land by a private party, in effect, places the burden of protecting one's land on the landowner-con-demnee by granting the condemner the power of eminent domain.
See
Iowa Code § 6A.4(2). While the argument that shifting this burden to the condemnee infringes upon his constitutional rights by denying him due process was not raised, we note this is not a consideration in the procedural due process analysis. The key to the procedural due process analysis is to ensure any deprivation of private property is fair. 16B Am.Jur.2d
Constitutional Law
§ 901, at 485 (1998). In doing so, the court focuses upon the procedure afforded, namely notice and an opportunity to be heard, which were both fulfilled here.
Id.
§ 902, at 488;
see also Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
