Liddick v. City of Council Bluffs

5 N.W.2d 361, 232 Iowa 197
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedAugust 11, 1942
DocketNo. 45817.
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 5 N.W.2d 361 (Liddick v. City of Council Bluffs) 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
Liddick v. City of Council Bluffs, 5 N.W.2d 361, 232 Iowa 197 (iowa 1942).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

For brevity and clarity, the City of Council Bluffs and its defending officers, and the Iowa State Highway Commission and its defending members, will be referred to, respectively, as the “City,” and as the “Commission.” This ease was tried below, and comes to this court, by somewhat irregular procedure. It was instituted by the plaintiffs and the defendants as a “test” case. While it was -alleged in the petition, and admitted in the answers, that the viaduct will be constructed unless the defendants are enjoined, it appears from the record that these allegations were simply for the- purpose of stating an issue, and that the defendants did hot and do not intend to build the viaduct if this court determines that the abutting owners are entitled to compensation for the tailing of their property or to damages for its injury. While they seek a ruling of this court in the nature of an advisory opinion, yet the question for determination is not exactly moot or abstract, and its answer is necessary for the disposition of an actual pending controversy and concerns a matter of public importance, the settlement of which is desired by all parties to the suit. The entrance of the interveners into the case has made it one of a real adversary nature, and the judgment and decree of this court will be a final adjudication of the rights of the parties. 1 C. J. S., Actions, 1012 et seq., sections 17, 18.

The construction of the viaduct has not been started. The only questions involved are those of law, and the one which we are asked to determine is whether the City is liable to the owners of property abutting on the street, at the location of the viaduct, for compensation for the tailing of their property, or for damages for its injury, growing out of the construction of the viaduct.

The defendants contend that even though the viaduct would permanently injure the property by impairing its use and depreciating its value, since the structure will be for a public purpose and wholly within the street lines and will not directly and actually invade or encroach upon the tangible abutting *201 property itself, there will be no “taking” of the property for a public use in the constitutional sense, requiring just compensation, and that any damages sustained will not be “legal” damages, but will be consequential damages, or damages for which there can never be any recovery, since they were presumably paid for or waived when the land for the highway was condemned, purchased, or dedicated.

The abutting property owners, however, insist that the viaduct will destroy or seriously interfere with their rights of access to and from their property, and to the passage of light and air thereto, and that these rights are valuable, and are their “private property,” which they have never parted with in any way, or for which they have never been compensated, and that the viaduct will effect a “taking” of these property rights in the constitutional sense, and that payment therefor should be made or secured before the property is taken. They also urge that the viaduct will effect a change in the established grade of the street, in conformity with which they improved their properties, and that such change will damage and diminish the value of their property, and that no alteration of the grade should be made until the damages are assessed and paid, in compliance with section 5953 et seq., Code of 1939.

We agree with the contentions of the abutting owners as above stated.

For 15 years or more before these proceedings were started, the building of this viaduct has been under consideration by the City and the Commission. In 1935 it was on the building program of the Commission, and was submitted to and was approved by the Federal Government, which was to make the funds available for construction costs, under an Act of Congress for the elimination of hazards to life at railway grade crossings, but which would furnish no money for the payment of compensation or damages to the owners of abutting property, or for right of way. F. R. White, chief engineer of the Commission, testified:

“Nothing was done about the proposed project at that time, because no provision had been made for taking care of any property damages and eventually the project was dropped *202 out of the program, and was not built because no provision had been made for the payment of damages to abutting property. The' matter of damages was so important that we refused to go ahead with the project until damages had been taken care of in some way. * * # the Commission has no authority to pay damages where the improvement is constructed wholly within the limits of the existing right of way. ’ ’

At that time it was not within the contemplation of the Commission or -of the City that abutting property owners were not entitled to compensation for any taking or impairment of their property.

In 1936, at a time when the proposed viaduct was planned to extend only from 9th Street on the east to 14th Street on the west, the City appointed three councilmen as a committee to make a complete investigation of all the property abutting on Broadway on the site of the viaduct. After making the investigation, and after collaboration with the appraisal board of the Council Bluffs Real Estate Board, they made a written report to the council. This report stated that the abutting property had a taxable value of $86,040; that the owners estimated the. property damages to be $200,100; and that, in the opinion of the committee, “a reasonable and adequate settlement” could be made for approximately $91,450. This report was accepted and filed. The estimate did not include damages to tenants. One of the committee, who owned much property in the city, estimated the damages to property and business at $100,000 to $125,000.

Late in 1937, it was the thought of attorneys for the City that the- viaduct might be constructed without paying damages to abutting property owners. The plan was and is that the cost of constructing the viaduct will be paid out of federal railroad-crossing funds, under an Act of Congress designed to eliminate hazards to life at railroad grade crossings. Broadway is an extension, within the city, of a number of much-traveled Iowa primary and United States roads. The Chicago & Northwestern Railroad Company tracks cross Broadway at right angles between 11th and 12th Streets, and the tracks of the Illinois Central Railroad Company cross in like manner at 13th Street. *203 The viaduct is not to be constructed by the railroad companies under the provisions of chapter 305 of the Iowa Code, under which damages to property must, be paid, nor by the City under chapters 301, 317, or any other statutory authority. But the plan proposed is that the Highway Commission will design, supervise, and construct the viaduct, under Code sections 4626, 4626.2, 4755.21, 4755.23, 4755.25, 4755.27, and other sections. Under the construction procedure proposed, no funds are said to be available from the Federal Government or from the Commission to pay any compensation or damages to abutting owners for the taking or injuring of their property.

There has been much activity on the part of the City and its officers during the past several years.

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Bluebook (online)
5 N.W.2d 361, 232 Iowa 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liddick-v-city-of-council-bluffs-iowa-1942.