Dicken v. Morgan
This text of 13 N.W. 57 (Dicken v. Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Before proceeding to consider the objection urged by the defendant to the validity of the establishment of the road, we will state that according to the abstract the road described m the record introduced in evidence does not appear to be the road in controversy, but a different road, running parallel to the road in controversy and a mile farther south. But no allusion is made to this fact by counsel on either side. They have assumed in their arguments that the road described in the abstract of the record is the road in controversy, and the witnesses seem to regard it as the same road. We have concluded, therefore, that a mistake was made in printing the abstract, that the word southeast was used where the word northeast was intended.
[160]*160
Whether this position be correct or not, we do not think it necessary to determine. That the action of the auditor was irregular, and erroneous, to say the least, must be admitted. It appears that in the year 1877 one Cooper commenced an action to enjoin one Ramsey, the road supervisor, from opening the road in controversy, and that after the substitution of J. H. Morgan, as party defendant, there was a trial involving the validity of said road • and the opening of the same was perpetually enjoined.
This must be regarded as an adjudication, binding upon the public, and upon all persons interested, that no road was legally established. The proper party defendant was before the court to test the question as to whether or not the road was a legal highway. The plaintiff’s obligation bound him to procure a highway, not merely upon paper, but one which could be opened and traveled. In this he failed. It is no answer to this position to say that he was not a party to the action for the injunction. He, as well as the whole public, was represented by the supervisor of roads, and is bound by the decree. Besides it appears that he had actual notice of the pendency of the action, and the evidence pretty conclusively shows that he caused a notice to be served on Cooper to open the road through his land.- The road supervisor was [161]*161the representative of the public, and the only person authorized by law to open the road, and the injunction is a complete bar to any further proceedings involving the validity of the road. The plaintiff’s obligation was to procure the establishment of the road, not subject to be defeated by any legal proceeding, either by injunction or certiorari. It having been judicially determined that the road cannot beopened} we think the defendant should not be required to pay the consideration he agreed to pay therefor.
Affirmed.
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13 N.W. 57, 59 Iowa 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dicken-v-morgan-iowa-1882.