McKinley v. Lucas County

244 N.W. 663, 215 Iowa 46
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 19, 1932
DocketNo. 41492.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 244 N.W. 663 (McKinley v. Lucas County) 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
McKinley v. Lucas County, 244 N.W. 663, 215 Iowa 46 (iowa 1932).

Opinion

Albert, J.

— Plaintiff is the owner of two 40-acre tracts of land, with the east and west highway in controversy between them. The defendants are Lucas County and the board of supervisors of that county. Plaintiff alleges that said highway has been used, maintained and traveled by the public for more than fifty years last past, is a county road, forty feet wide, with fences constructed on *48 either side accordingly; that the defendants threatened to enter upon his land,' remove his fences and appropriate part of the land for the avowed purpose of widening said highway.

The defendants answered, in substance, that said highway is a duly and legally laid-out highway, of the width of 66 feet, and they are within their rights in appropriating a sufficient amount of plaintiff’s land on either side to make the highway 66 feet in width.

Plaintiff replied, alleging, in substance, that said highway was never duly and legally established as provided by law, and if it were, it was established as a highway forty feet wide only.

Thus the issues were made in this case.

The evidence shows that the defendants are planning to 'improve and do work on said highway and they served notice on the plaintiff to set the fences back thirteen feet beyond where they now exist and have existed at their present location for fifty years or more. The evidence of the engineer shows that the present highway varies from 38 to 42 feet in width between the fences, and that he, as engineer, set stakes for a 66-foot highway and caused notice to be served on the plaintiff to move back his fences.

There can be no dispute between the parties that if the highway in controversy is a duly and legally established highway, it is 66 feet in width. The record we have before us is silent as to this matter. See Revision of 1860, Section 820; Biglow v. Ritter, 131 Iowa 213; Carstens v. Keating, 210 Iowa 1326.

The primary question therefore is: Was the highway duly and legally established?

The point is made that the board of supervisors, in attempting to establish this highway, never acquired jurisdiction! Unfortunately the records in relation to the action of the board of supervisors in this matter are meager. The original petition and papers showing the proceedings for the establishment of the road have been lost. The minute book of the board on January 9, 1868, contained the following notation:

“Supervisor Plotts moved that-J. H. West, Abbott Kendall and William Thompson be appointed commissioners to assess damages claimed by McKinley, Russell and LaFollette, in the establishing of the road petitioned for by F. Savacool et al. in Washington township. Motion carried.” :

*49 Under date of June 2, 1868, we find the following note in the proceedings of the board of supervisors:

“On motion the petition, plat, field notes and report of commissioners to assess damages in a road petitioned for by F. Sava-, cool et al. in Washington township, taken up. Supervisor Plotts moved to establish the road. Supervisor Wheeler moved to amend by establishing the road upon the petitioner’s paying the damages assessed within 90 days. Ayes and Nays being called upon the amendment resulted as follows: Ayes, Messrs. Curtis, Day, Funk, Keyes, Reddingshafer, Stover, Turner, Wheeler, Weaver, and Walker; Nays, 2. Amendment carried, and road ordered established upon petitioners’ paying within 90 days the following damages, to wit: Jefferson McKinley, $12.50; Adam LaFollette, $25.00; Reuben Russell, $12.50.”

The road calendar book No. 1 shows this road as road “No. 72.”

These are all of the records and practically all of the evidence introduced by the defendants on this question, except the testimony of one witness who was at one time a member of the board of supervisors of Lucas county, who testified that as such supervisor he looked up the records in the auditor’s office at one time in relation to this matter and found a petition asking for a 40-foot road.

A review of this record therefore shows that it is wholly silent as to any notice of this proceeding prior to the action of the board of supervisors. Section 824 of the Revision of 1860 reads as follows:

“Previous to the presentation of a petition for the establishment of a co'unty road four weeks’ notice thereof must be given by being posted up at the court house door and in three public places in each township through which it is to pass and in the neighborhood of the proposed road.”

Section 825: “Such notice must state the principal points through which it will pass if any such are contemplated, and state the time at which application will be made to the county court [board of supervisors] for the appointment of a commissioner to examine and report upon the same.”

The question at this point therefore is whether or not the board of supervisors acquired jurisdiction to lay out and establish this proposed highway. The defendants insist that the record having *50 been made establishing said highway, plus certain presumptions of law, are sufficient to show that this was a legally laid-out and established highway.

Section 4120, Revision of 1860, provides:

“The future proceedings of all officers and of all courts of limited and inferior jurisdiction within this state shall, like those of general and superior jurisdiction, be presumed regular except in regard to matters required to be entered of record, and except where otherwise expressly declared.”

Defendants invoked this section, and also the case of Harbacheck v. Moorland Telephone Co., 208 Iowa 552. It is probably true that after jurisdiction is once established, then the future proceedings of the board fall within the rule laid down by the statute above set out; but the very question we have here is not whether this presumption shall operate, but whether or not the board had jurisdiction in the first instance to proceed in this matter. The Harbacheck case, supra, was a case in which the resolution passed by the board of supervisors establishing said highway recited in terms, “four weeks’ notice has been given by being posted up at the courthouse door * * * and in three public places,” etc. We held that finding by the board of supervisors was sufficient to confer jurisdiction, and when that occurred, the presumption provided by statute would operate.

In the case of Cooper v. Sunderland, 3 Iowa 114, we held this presumption is not exercised in relation to' the jurisdiction of a court inferior, and of limited jurisdiction.

In Morrow v. Weed, 4 Iowa 77, l. c. 89, we said:

“We think the cases will support the following two rules: If there be a petition, or the proper matter of that nature, to call into action the power or jurisdiction of the court, the sufficiency of it cannot he called in question collaterally. * " * If there be a notice or publication, or whatever of this nature the law requires in reference to persons or other matters, its sufficiency cannot be questioned collaterally. Of course, this means a notice coming within the legal idea and range of such a matter. An absurdity could not be permitted to pass.”

Again in the Morrow case we said:

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Bluebook (online)
244 N.W. 663, 215 Iowa 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinley-v-lucas-county-iowa-1932.