73 Iowa 194 | Iowa | 1887
The conceded facts are that, when Leynor’s addition to Des Moines was laid out, platted and recorded, the fee or title to the streets was vested in the city. Madison street runs north and south, parallel to Nineteenth street. The former is 53J feet wide, and Nineteenth street is 38 feet wide. Madison is a short street, being only 1,000 feet long, as we understand. The plaintiffs own property abutting on the west side of Madison street, and the city council proposes to vacate 12 feet off of the east side of said street, and convey the same to the owners of lots between that street and Nineteenth, in consideration of which said property owners agree to convey to the city the same quantity of land off of the east side of their lots, which abut on Nineteenth street. So that, if this project is carried into effect, Nineteenth street will he widened 12 feet, and Madison will be that much narrower than it now is.
It is provided by statute that cities have the “ power to lay off, open, widen, straighten, narrow, vacate, extend, establish and light streets. * * *” (Code, § 464.) Under this statute the defendants claim that the city has the power to do what is proposed to be done. This is denied by the plaintiffs; their claim being that they became the owners of their lots upon the faith and implied promise that Madison street'should always remain a public highway, of the same width as it was when they purchased their lots, and that they will be materially damaged if the proposed change in he width of such street is made. The defendants deny that
Both parties have cited and largely rely on the prior deeisions of this court in support of their respective theories. The plaintiffs cite and rely on City of Dubuque v. Maloney, 9 Iowa, 450, and Cook v. City of Burlington, 30 Id., 94. In the first case, the fee to the streets was in the abutting property owners, and in the latter, the fee to the land in controversy was in the city. It is evident, it seems to us, that the facts just stated make a material difference, and that the rights of abutting property owners may be greater in such case than where the fee is in the city. In Yost v. Leonard, 34 Iowa, 9, the proprietor who had laid out the town sought to vacate certain streets, the title to which he had conveyed to the town, and such were in substance the facts in Fisher v. Beard, 32 Iowa, 346. These cases are materially different from the one at bar. The plaintiffs cite City of Marshalltown v. Forney, 61 Iowa, 578, and Dempsey v. City of Burlington, 66 Id., 687. In the former case there were no private rights involved. The material question was whether the act of the city vacating the alley was ultra vires. In the latter, the only questions were as to the validity of the ordinance, and whether the parties were entitled to notice of the application made for the vacation. What is there said as to the power of the city was by way of argument on the question whether the ordinance was void because it contained more than one subject. In Warren v. Mayor of Lyons, 22 Iowa, 351, the city claimed the right to divide a square, which had been dedicated to the public as such by the proprietor, into lots, and sell the same, and convert the proceeds to its own use, against the protest of such proprietor, who owned lots which abutted on streets abutting on the square; and in Gray v. Iowa Land Co., 26 Iowa, 387, the plaintiff had no such interest in the maintenance of the streets as they at one time existed as to allow her to object to their being changed or vacated. In Milburn
Bat it may be said as to these cases that the use of the streets was not diverted. That is, they were still devoted to a public use, different, possibly, from the one intended by the proprietor who laid out the town, and conveyed the fee in the streets to the municipality in trust for the public. While in none of these cases heretofore determined by tliis court are the facts similar to those in the case at bar, yet the power of the city, in a proper case, to vacate a street, has been several times affirmed. Such power is clearly conferred by statute. Under it the power to narrow, widen, or vacate a street is practically unlimited, when it is exercised for the public good, and yet it cannot be arbitrarily exercised under the pretense that the public good requires it. While this is true, it is subject to equitable control, and, therefore, to a large extent, each case must be determined in accordance with its own particular facts. An abutting lot-owner cannot arbitrarily object to the vacation of a street, or part of a street, nor can he, upon slight grounds, prevent the accomplishment of that which is a material benefit to the general public; and the conclusion of the city council will, ordinarily at least, be conclusive as to the question whether the vacation of a particular street is for the public good. This being so, the question is whether the plaintiffs will be materially damaged. That they will be damaged to some extent will be conceded; but no tangible property belonging to them will be taken or appropriated for the public benefit. In a city or other community, at least some rights of an individual must be subordinate to the general good. A careful consideration of the evidence satisfies us that the plaintiffs will not be materially damaged by the proposed vacation of a part of Madison street. It is true that the plaintiffs, or some of them, testify generally that in their opinion each lot owned
Reversed.