102 Iowa 449 | Iowa | 1897
— The claim of appellant is that without a service of the notice on Ethel A. Starry, the minor, the board of. supervisors was without jurisdiction to establish the highway. The following is section 986 of the Code: “Within twenty days after the day is fixed by the auditor as above provided, a notice shall be served on each owner or occupier of land lying in the proposed highway, or abutting thereon, as shown by the transfer books in the auditor’s office, who resides in the county, in the manner provided for the service of original notice, in actions at law; and such notice shall be published for four weeks in some newspaper printed in the county, if any such there be, which notice may be in the following form.” The form of notice is in conformity to the requirements of the section, providing, among other things, that the names of the owners of land through which the proposed road is to pass shall be stated therein as they appear upon the transfer books of the auditor’s office; and it will be noticed that the section, as quoted, requires the notice to be served on each owner of abutting property “as shown by the transfer books in the auditor’s office.” Such transfer books did not show Ethel A. Starry such an owner, but it is said they showed Albert Starry as the owner, and that the records in the clerk’s office would show him deceased, and that a list of all his heirs and representatives are there recorded in the probate proceedings; and the argument is that because of this the owner should have been known and served. To us, the difficulty with the position is that it requires a service to be