62 Iowa 11 | Iowa | 1883
I. The farm of the plaintiff is situated in Greene county. The appeal from the assessment of the
II. The farm of the plaintiff consists of 222 acres. The right of Avay upon which defendant’s road was constructed
It is claimed that this was improper evidence, because the plaintiff could not enhance his damages by showing that the railroad was negligently or improperly constructed; and the
We tliink the evidence was competent, and deem it to say that the plaintiff did not by the evidence seek to show that the road was improperly constructed. No witness was asked whether the embankment which destroyed the spring was necessary to the proper construction of the road. It will be presumed that it was necessary. And the plaintiff did not seek by the evidence to show the destruction of the spring as a separate item of damages.
III. Objection was made to certain questions propounded by the plaintiff to a witness-named Jay, who was introduced
IY. Another witness was interrogated as to the sale of the Parks farm, and answered that he knew of the sale by what Parks told him. The defendant moved to
These objections, we think, were properly overruled. The knowledge which qualifies a witness to testify as to values must necessarily consist largely of hearsay. The examination of market reports, and information acquired from others
Y. As has already been stated, the plaintiff was examined as a witness in his own behalf in the absence of defendant’s
When the plaintiff rested his case, the defendant called the plaintiff as a witness, and, after examining him with great particularity as to the location of the farm and the manner in which it was affected by the railroad having been constructed through it, he was asked whether he stated in his examination in the absence of defendant’s counsel anything about the amount of damages, and, if so, what he said. The
Our attention is called by counsel to rulings of the court on pages 55 and 56 of the abstract. The counsel there asked the witness to put a value upon certain parts of his
YI. The defendant called the jurors or commissioners who had assessed the damages in the first instance, and in-
YI1. The defendant asked that a number of special interrogations be submitted to the jury. The request was
VIII. The most of the charge given by the court to the jury was excepted to, and the defendant asked certain
“6. The land which the defendant has taken for its right of way is a strip of ground one hundred feet in width, and lying fifty feet on either side of the center line of the track of defendant’s railroad, as the same is laid upon the surface of the ground. The right which the defendant acquires to this strip of ground is a right to fence it olf from the adjoining lands on either sido, and construct and operate its railroad thereon.
“7; It may also take, remove and use for the construction and repair of said railway and its appurtenances, any earth, stone, gravel, timber, or other materials, on or from the land so taken. The right is a perpetual one at the option of the defendant; that is, it will continue so long as the defendant, or any person or corporation claiming under it, sees fit to and does use said land for railway purposes.
“8. If, at any time, the railway built upon this right of way should cease to be used or operated for a period of eight*20 consecutive years, the land embraced in said right of way, and the title thereto, would revert to the person who then owned the adjoining land.”
It is urged that paragraph seven of these instructions is erroneous, because. it does not limit the right to remove earth, stone, gravel, etc., from the right of way to such quantities as may be necessary for the purpose of the construction and repair of the railroad.' The statute provides that “any railway corporation * * * may take and hold * * * so much real estate as may be necessary for the location, construction and the convenient use of its railway, and may also take, remove and use for the construction and repair of said railway and its appurtenances, any earth, gravel, stone, timber, or other material, on or from the land so taken.” Code, § 1241.
The instruction complained of is in the language of this section of the law, so far as it applies to the removal of stone, earth, gravel, etc.
The restriction as to what is necessary applies to the quantity of land to be condemned, and not to the quantity of the materials named to be used in construction and repair. This cannot be made plainer than the statute makes it. Of course, the railroad has no right to wantonly destroy timber, or use earth for other purposes than the statute provides, and there is no conflict between the instruction in this case and the case of Preston v. Dubuque & Pacific R. R. Co., 11 Iowa, 15. In that case the court erroneously instructed the jury that the R. R. Co. had the right to “destroy or appropriate the entire timber on the strip, if the company should deem it necessary or convenient so to do.” No such right can be deduced from the instructions in this case.
There are other objections to the instructions to the jury, and to the refusal to give instructions, which we do not deem it necessary to consider in detail. It is enough to say that the instructions given appear to ns to cover every question in the case in a clear, concise and perspicuous manner, and Ate find no error in them. Affirmed.