Eggleston v. Town of Aurora

10 N.W.2d 104, 233 Iowa 559
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 15, 1943
DocketNo. 46247.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 10 N.W.2d 104 (Eggleston v. Town of Aurora) 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.

Bluebook
Eggleston v. Town of Aurora, 10 N.W.2d 104, 233 Iowa 559 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

Wennerstrum, J.

This case comes to this court for a review of the proceedings in the assessment of damages by a trial jury which had heard an appeal in the district court from the original assessment set by a sheriff’s jury in Condemnation proceedings brought by the Town of Aurora for the purpose of obtaining 13.82 acres for a park. The sheriff’s, jury had assessed the damages sustained by the plaintiffs at $1,036.50.,. The district court also set the amount of the damages for all the plaintiffs at $1,036.50. Thereafter a motion for a new trial and exceptions to instructions were submitted and overruled. The plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment entered and damages allowed.

Throughout this opinion, the parties interested in the land involved, and wlm appealed from the damages allowed by the sheriff’s jury, are referred to as plaintiffs, and the Town of Aurora, which brought the condemnation proceedings, is referred to as defendant.

Prior to the institution of the condemnation proceedings by the Town of Aurora in September 1941, the Lincoln National Life Insurance Company of Fort Wayne, Indiana, was the record titleholder of 245 acres of farm land adjacent to the Town of Aurora. The 13.82 acres involved in these proceedings are a part of the above-referred-to farm.. Oh November 7, 1940, the insurance company entered into a contract of sale of the 245 acres to E. B. Eggleston and Florence Eggleston. *561 This contract was not recorded. Otto Draves was the tenant in possession of the farm. Florence Eggleston was not made a party to the original condemnation proceedings instituted for the assessment of damages by the sheriff’s commission. However, in the petition filed by the plaintiffs in the appeal to the district court she was referred to as one of the equitable owners of the property involved. Thereafter, and before the trial of the appeal in the district court, the defendant town filed a motion to require that Florence Eggleston be made a party plaintiff or defendant in the appeal proceedings, as provided by section 10981 of the 1939 Code of Iowa. The court sustained defendant’s motion and reqtrired that she be made a party plaintiff in the action. Prior to the commencement of the trial the plaintiffs filed an amendment to their petition, wherein it was stated that Florence Eggleston was one of the owners of the real estate involved in the condemnation proceedings and in the appeal, that she joined in the pending action as one of the parties plaintiff and also joined in the prayer of the petition. Tn this amendment the plaintiffs, E. B. Eggleston and Florence Eggleston, demanded judgment against the defendant for the sum of $4,000, and for costs, including a reasonable attorney’s fee for plaintiffs’ attorney.

In the petition of appeal to the district court the plaintiffs set out some twenty-six alleged elements of damage.

I. One of the alleged errors claimed by the plaintiffs to have been made by the trial court is that the court had no jurisdiction or authority to require Florence Eggleston to- be made a party plaintiff in the appeal action. It is further claimed that the court had no jurisdiction as far as the property rights and title of the farm in Florence Eggleston were concerned and that in making its order and ruling it was in error and exceeded its jurisdiction. It is contended that, inasmuch as Florence Eggleston was not made a party in the condemnation proceedings originally brought, the court had no jurisdiction to require that she be made a party in the appeal proceedings pending in the district court. We are of the opinion that plaintiffs’ contention is not sound and cannot be sustained.

Section 10981, 1939 Code of Iowa, in part states:

*562 “ * * * but when a determination of the controversy between the parties before the court cannot be made without the presence of other parties, it must order them to be brought in. ’ ’

In connection with plaintiffs’ amendment to the petition, to which reference has previously been made, it should be kept in mind-"that Florence Eggleston therein joined in the original petition and asked that judgment be entered in favor of E. B. Eggleston and herself. Although our disposition and ruling upon this alleged error is not similar to that found in the case of Bruner v. Myers, 203 Iowa 570, 571, 572, 213 N. W. 217, the statements therein made are quite applicable to the situation presented in the present case. It is there stated:

“In this undisputed state of the record, we cannot entertain this appeal. There has been no determination whatever of the merits of the action. If it be conceded that the court’s order requiring additional parties to be brought in, as necessary to a determination of the case, as provided by Section 10981, Code of 1924, is subject to review by appeal (a question we do not determine), the appellant herein complied with said order, and by so doing waived the right to appeal from the order made. A party cannot fully comply with such an order and still appeal thferefrom. Gordon v. Ellison, 9 Iowa 317; Lillie v. Skinner, 46 Iowa 329; Krause v. Lloyd, 100 Iowa 666. See, also, Smith v. Waterloo, C. F. & N. R. Co., 191 Iowa 668.”

In connection with the jurisdictional question, we consider the following statement in the case of Haas v. Contest Court, 221 Iowa 150, 161, 265 N. W. 373, 378, quite pertinent:

“Aside from this, we have doubts as to whether or not the failure to make the proper parties defendants is jurisdictional. # * *

“Section 10981 provides that:

“ ‘The court may determine any controversy between parties before it, when it can be done without prejudice to the rights of others, or by saving their rights; but when a determination of the controversy between the parties before the court cannot be made without the presence of other parties, it must order them to be brought in. ’
*563 “If we assimilate the procedure in this case, as provided by the above statutes, to the ordinary action, then under the last section above quoted, the remedy, if there were not proper parties, would not be to dismiss the action for want of proper parties, but to ask the court to make an order bringing in such parties as it is claimed are necessary; and, where such situation exists, the court still has jurisdiction of the parties before it, and therefore the contention is not well taken that there was a lack of jurisdiction for want of proper parties.”

It is, of course, imperative that all interested parties have an opportunity to be heard. This opportunity was preserved for Florence Eggleston in the appeal proceedings. The matter was triable de novo in the district .court and her rights were in no way jeopardized because she was not made a party in the original condemnation proceedings wherein the sheriff’s jury set an allowance for damages. The purpose of the quoted statute is salutary. The right and authorization given by this statute make possible a more speedy conclusion of litigation. The ruling of the trial court thus made possible, prompt consideration of the right of all interested parties in the condemnation proceedings. We approve of this ruling. See Ellsworth & Jones v. Railway Co., 91 Iowa 386, 388, 59 N. W. 78.

II.

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10 N.W.2d 104, 233 Iowa 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eggleston-v-town-of-aurora-iowa-1943.