In Re City of Des Moines

35 N.W.2d 571, 240 Iowa 64, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 465
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 11, 1949
DocketNo. 47311.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 N.W.2d 571 (In Re City of Des Moines) 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
In Re City of Des Moines, 35 N.W.2d 571, 240 Iowa 64, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 465 (iowa 1949).

Opinion

Oliver, J.

— Chapter 417, Code of Iowa, 1946, is applicable to street improvements in commission plan cities of 125,000 or more. Acting thereunder the city council of Des Moines adopted a resolution of necessity and made and approved a schedule of assessments and valuations for the improvement of Bowdoin Street from the north line of Seneca Avenue to the south line of Madison Avenue, by opening, extending, improving, widening and acquiring right of way, and widening, improving and acquiring right of way for Columbia Street from the north line of Seneca Avenue to the south, line of Madison Avenue.

Seneca Avenue, which runs east and west, is about six hundred feet south of and parallel to Madison Avenue. Columbia Street runs north and south. It is about three hundred thirty-one feet west of Bowdoin Street, which also runs north and south. The benefited district, designated by the City, was a rectangle about six hundred sixty feet long (north and south) and four hundred fifty feet wide. Its north side was Madison Avenue, its south side Seneca Avenue, its west side Columbia Street and its east side a north-and-south line about ninety-five feet east of the center line of Bowdoin Street.

Pursuant to the foregoing acts of the city council, the city solicitor'instituted this action in district court under Code section 417.28. Two property owners objected, alleging benefited properties had been omitted from the schedule of property assessed. They contend the assessment district was so narrow (east and west)'that the assessments against their properties were unreasonable and inequitable. They assert the following property should have been included:

(1) Twelve lots in Lockland Addition fronting east on the west side of Columbia Street and immediately west of the district as established. (2) Lots 5 and 6 in Bowen Place. These *66 lots are east of the east line of the district. They front north on Madison Avenue.

I. The record shows Columbia Street as improved will be fifty feet wide. Many years ago, when Lockland Addition was platted, a strip twenty-five feet wide on which these twelve lots fronted was platted as Columbia Street and was accepted and used as such. This twenty-five-foot strip will be the west half of Columbia Street, as widened.

Counsel for the City contend that because this twenty-five-foot strip had been platted as a street by the original owner of the property, these lots in Lockland Addition had furnished the land for their (west) half of the street and should not bear any of the expense of obtaining the east half. We do not agree with this conclusion. The owners of the land platted as Lockland Addition had no greater rights in Columbia Street after it was accepted by the City than did the owners of the property which adjoined it on the east. Obviously, the present owners, all of whom subsequently purchased the lots in. question, have no legal or equitable claim to preference or exemption. The city engineer testified these lots in Lockland would be benefited in that they would front on a street fifty feet in width, instead of twenty-five feet. It is clear they should have been included in the schedule of assessments. See City of Muscatine v. Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co., 88 Iowa 291, 55 N. W. 100.

II. Objector Minium owns Lot 7 in Bowen Place.’ This lot is four hundred thirty-two feet long, north and south. It was about ninety-five feet wide. Minium’s residence faces north and Lot 7 fronts north on Madison Avenue. In this proceeding the City has taken by condemnation a twenty-five-foot strip off the west side of Lot 7. This strip will be the east half of Bowdoin Street. The width of Lot 7 has been reduced to seventy feet. The City proposes to assess it $1047 on the basis of its length which abuts on Bowdoin Street. This is almost one fourth of the cost of the entire improvement of both streets. Lot 6 abuts Lot 7 on the east. It is about four hundred thirty-two feet long and ninety-five feet wide. Lot 5 abuts Lot 6 on the east. Both of these lots front north on Madison Avenue as does Lot 7. Prior to the improvement there was no north-and-south street *67 near Lots 5 and 6. Bowdoin Street will be an adjacent intersecting street which should benefit Lots 5 and 6. Neither Lot 5 nor Lot 6 was included in the assessment district.

The city engineer testified this was a quiet residential street and the most benefit on any quiet residential street is the ingress and egress to abutting property. However, his subsequent testimony indicates the primary reason for the omission of Lots 5 and 6 was that if. another north-and-south street one block east of Bowdoin Street should ever be opened Lot 5 would probably be subject to assessment for that improvement. There is no plan or proposal to open this other street. The mere possibility that eventually it may be opened would not justify the omission of.either of these lots from the assessment district in the case at-bar. We are not prepared to hold the trial court erred in concluding Lots 5 and 6 should not have been omitted from.the assessment district.

III. Various sections of chapter 417, Code of. Iowa, 1946, are here involved. Upon passage of a resolution of necessity for a local improvement, section 417.28 requires the city solicitor to file a petition in district court, “praying that steps be taken to levy a special assessment for said improvement, in accordance with the provisions of said resolution of necessity.” Sections 417.12 and 417.13 provide for published notice that the City has filed the petition, “praying said court to confirm the valuations and assessments” with the date of the trial thereon, and that the “district court shall have jurisdiction of the real estate, the real estate valuations and assessments as finally fixed by the city council * * Section 417.43 states if no objections are filed the court shall immediately confirm the assessment.

Section 417.37 provides:

“Upon the hearing upon said petition, the said court shall have power to correct any irregularities or inequalities in valuations or in the schedule of assessments, and shall consider any objections because of alleged illegal procedure or fraud in the proceedings.
“The court shall inquire whether the city solicitor has omitted any property benefited, and as to whether the schedule of assessments is just and equitable as between the public and *68 the property assessed, and between the lots or parcels of property assessed.
“The court shall have the power to revise, correct, or modify the description or the cost between the properties affected, or the city solicitor shall make any corrections upon the order of the court.”

The portions of chapter 417 here pertinent were enacted in 1929 as parts of chapter 194, Acts of Forty-third General Assembly. The procedure established by this chapter differs in various respects from that provided by other special assessment statutes of this state. Among other things it requires a review by the court of the proceedings of the city, and notice thereof to all persons interested in the real estate proposed to be assessed. The proposed assessments'-are not effective unless and until they are confirmed by the court upon such review.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City of Des Moines v. City of Des Moines
254 N.W.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1977)
Petition of City of Des Moines
245 N.W.2d 533 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1976)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 N.W.2d 571, 240 Iowa 64, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-city-of-des-moines-iowa-1949.