Knudson v. Board of Supervisors

143 N.W. 988, 162 Iowa 97
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 13, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 143 N.W. 988 (Knudson v. Board of Supervisors) 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
Knudson v. Board of Supervisors, 143 N.W. 988, 162 Iowa 97 (iowa 1913).

Opinion

Deemer, J.

October 5, 1908, certain landowners petitioned the board of supervisors of Hamilton county for the establishment of a drainage district in said county, which was afterward known as Mud Lake district No. 71. As a part of the petition was the following: ‘ ‘ Said ditch or ditches are described and located by the accompanying plat or description shown and set forth herein. But the engineer in charge may deviate from such description and plat in so far as such deviation, in his judgment, may be necessary in order to make the improvement practicable.” Pursuant thereto an engineer was appointed who made a report favoring the establishment of the same, which was accompanied by a plat and profile. Plaintiff’s land was within the proposed district, and, according to the original plat and profile, a ditch was to be constructed on the east side of a road which was one of the boundaries of plaintiff’s land between sections 27 and,28.

Plaintiff filed a claim for damages in the sum of $1,200, and the commissioners appointed to assess the damages allowed him the sum of $850 thereon. Thereafter the hoard made ah order establishing the district, but as a part thereof made the following change: “. . . Wherefore the prayer of the petitioners is granted and said drainage district is hereby established as per plat and profile returned by the engineer making the preliminary survey, and the ditches are located as shown on the plat, except that the part of the ditch running north and south between sections 27 and 28 on the east side of the highway shall be located on the west side of such highway, and the Koop branch shall be changed and located along the natural waterway, and such- drainage district shall be known as the Mud Lake drainage district No. 71.” Damages were allowed plaintiff in the sum recommended by the commissioners, to wit, $850. The board also made the following as a part of the order: “Moved and seconded that the auditor be instructed to give Gilbert Knudson and D. B. & L. B. Jewell [99]*99notice of the change made in the location of the ditch to the west side of the highway on his land in section 28, Lyon township, Hamilton county, Iowa, and their damages allowed as follows: Gilbert Knudson, $270; D. B. & L. B. Jewell, $250. ’ ’ And these additional damages were allowed and assessed as a part of the expense. The auditor gave notice to the plaintiff and the other parties named and in the notice stated: “. . . at which time the board established the Mud Lake district, also changed the location of the ditch between sections 27 and 28, Lyon township, so as to run the ditch on the west side of highway instead of the east side of highway. And on account of sáid change the board have allowed you damages as follows: Gilbert Knudson, east side of section 28, $270; D. B. & L. B. Jewell, east side of section 28, $250.” Pursuant to this notice, plaintiff filed the following claim for additional damages: “The undersigned claims to be the owner of the E. y2 of the N. E. 14, section 28, township '87, range 24, which drainage district has been petitioned for by H. Ferbitz and others, and you are hereby notified that, in the event of said drainage district being established, I claim damages in the sum of $700.”

A settlement was talked of and plaintiff presented the following proposition to the board: “To the Honorable Board of Supervisors of Hamilton Couhty, Iowa: Comes now Gilbert Knudson, the owner of the land on the west side of the highway running north and south between sections 27 and 28, Lyon township, within the Mud Lake drainage district, and hereby accepts the sum of $550 in lieu of $270 allowed, in full for all claims for damages for the location of the ditch on the west side of said highway on his said premises; and he especially waives all questions of his rights as to the location of said ditch, and the question of time and notice.” Pursuant to this the board made the following record: “J. E. Burnstedt, attorney for Gilbert Knudson, appeared before the board'and objected to the damages allowed to said Knudson on April 1, 1909, in the Mud Lake drainage district No. 71, and by way [100]*100of compromise the board accepted the proposition presented by said J. B. Burnstedt, the same being placed on file. The board adjourned for further action. ’ ’

Plaintiff served notice of appeal to the district court from some of the orders of the board, the notice being served on July 25, 1910, but nothing seems to have been done with this appeal. On March 11, 1911, the county auditor issued to plaintiff a warrant for the sum of $1,400 in full of all damages due to the establishment of the district, and plaintiff received and cashed the same on October 5, 1911; he, without returning any of the money received, commenced this action to restrain the board and the contractors from cutting the ditch across his land which was on the west side of the highway hitherto mentioned.

Whilst the plat and profile of the district seem to have been introduced in evidence, they are not reproduced in the record, and all we know about them is what is testified to by the witnesses. There is no dispute in the record as to the facts so far narrated, but plaintiff claims that, in carrying out the revised plans, the board and the construction company did not locate the ditch according to the plans, placing it upon his land farther than was intended; and that they also took more land for the ditch than was contemplated by any of the plans; and as alternative relief he asked for additional damages because of the taking of more land than was contemplated, and he averred that he was and is ready, able, and willing to do equity, in the case.

1. Drainage construction of drain: presumption: burden proof. It is apparent from the record, so far quoted, that the issue presented by plaintiff is a narrow one. He admits an enlarged allowance by reason of a change in the location of the ditch and the settlement set out; but he claims that the defendants ultimately changed the location of the ditch from its proposed . . location according to the revised plans and took more of plaintiff’s land than was contemplated. Defendants insist that even if these things were established, the [101]*101truth of which it denies, plaintiff’s remedy, if he had any, was by appeal, and further pleads that plaintiff was fully advised as to the location of the ditch and the amount of land taken when the appraisers came to assess his damages by reason of the relocation of the ditch; that notwithstanding this he made the settlement, did not appeal, and deferred any action until he commenced this suit; and that, by reason of these facts, he is estopped from maintaining his present suit. By reason of the absence of the plats, profiles, field notes, etc., of the surveyor showing the original location of the ditch and its exact location when changed over upon plaintiff’s land, we have had some difficulty in arriving at the exact facts with reference to these matters. Both sides rely upon oral testimony which is more or less indefinite and unsatisfactory.

But it is clear from the record, so far considered, that presumptively, at least, plaintiff has no case, for he was notified of the proposed change of the ditch, filed his claims for damages, proposed a settlement which was accepted by the board, and received his money not only for damage caused by the original location but by reason of the change and receipted in full for all his damages.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 N.W. 988, 162 Iowa 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knudson-v-board-of-supervisors-iowa-1913.