Michalek v. Cedar Rapids & Iowa City Railway & Light Co.

173 Iowa 231
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 17, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 173 Iowa 231 (Michalek v. Cedar Rapids & Iowa City Railway & Light Co.) 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
Michalek v. Cedar Rapids & Iowa City Railway & Light Co., 173 Iowa 231 (iowa 1915).

Opinion

Evans, J.

The plaintiff is the owner of land on both sides of the defendant’s railway. His farm consists of 167 acres. The railway of the defendant company traverses the same so as to leave on one side a triangular tract comprising about 8 acres, and on the other side, the remainder of the farm. The defendant’s railway is an electric interurban road. The plaintiff demands an underground crossing at a designated point. He made his request of the defendant while the railway was in course of' construction. The following diagram will be an aid to an understanding of the discussion:

[233]*233The diagram here shown comprises the 8-acre tract already referred to. The base of this triangle is about 1,800 feet, the perpendicular about 560 feet, and the hypotenuse about 1,900 feet. The base is a part of the south line of plaintiff’s farm and abuts upon' an east and west highway. (This highway, however, runs in a slightly diagonal direction, of which we need take no account for the purpose of this discussion.) The hypotenuse is the line of defendant’s railway. It cuts off the triangle from the southwest part of plaintiff’s farm. The main buildings upon plaintiff’s farm, at the time of the appropriation of the right of way, were those located 'near the southeast corner thereof, and some distance east of the intersection of railway and highway, shown in the above diagram. At such time, however, plaintiff was contemplating the erection of another set of buildings upon that part of his farm included within the triangular tract. The reason for this was that he had entered into án arrangement with his son for the operation of his farm, whereby the son was to occupy the original buildings and whereby he himself was to build a new set of buildings for his own occupation. In pursuance of such plan, the plaintiff erected a house, and, at the time of the trial below, was making preparations to erect a barn upon such tract. The plan between the father and son also contemplated, after 1914, a division of the farm into approximately equal parts and the use of the eastern part by the son, and of the western part by the father. The location of the house and the proposed location of the barn are shown upon the above diagram. The place of the requested crossing is also shown, therein. Prior to plaintiff’s demand, the defendant company had already improvised a crossing, which did qot, however, comply with the requirements of the statute.

[234]*2341. Mandamus: when writ lies: railroad crossing: refusal to construct: concurrent jurisdiction of railway commission. [233]*233The real controversy between the parties is whether the plaintiff is entitled to an order in this action for an underground crossing. The defendant is willing to furnish to him [234]*234either one or two grade crossings, at any point where it Practicable to construct the same. The defendant also contends that there are points at which such construction is practicable. On the other hand, the plaintiff contends that, by , reason of the high grade of the railway, an adequate grade crossing is not practicable at any point within the boundaries of the plaintiff’s land, and for that reason he demands an underground crossing.

At the threshold of the controversy, we are confronted with a new statute, being Chapter 3 63, Acts 35th G. A. Such act repealed Section 2022, Code Sup., 1907, and in lieu thereof enacted the following:

[“When any person owns land on both sides of any railway] , or when the railway runs parallel with the public highway, thereby severing the farm from the public highway, [the corporation owning the same shall, when requested to do so, make and keep in good repair a sufficient causeway or other adequate means of crossing the same and one cattle guard on each side thereof connected by cross fences to the right of way fence on each side of the right of way at such reasonable place as may be designated by the owner.] If such person desires more than one crossing or desires an overhead or underground crossing over or under said railway, he shall serve or cause to be served a notice in writing upon such railway company setting forth his demand, with a plat of the land showing the place and manner of the desired crossing or crossings. If such railway company, within thirty days after having been served with such notice, has failed and refused to construct such crossing or crossings, such person may apply to the board of railroad commissioners of this state which shall have full authority to determine all questions growing out of such demand, and upon hearing, after due notice, make such order as it may deem just and equitable.”

It is the contention of the defendant that the effect of this enactment is to confer upon the railroad commissioners [235]*235exclusive jurisdiction over the question of -underground crossings, and that the court, therefore, has no jurisdiction to decree an underground crossing. It will be noted that the first part of the enactment above quoted, which, for convenience, we have indicated in brackets, is an exact reproduction of Code Section 2022 as amended by the 32d G, A. and as it appeared in the Code Supplement of 1907. Under such Section 2022, we have previously held that its provisions were enforceable by a mandamus proceeding in court, notwithstanding that, subsequently to its enactment, a concurrent jurisdiction had been conferred by statute upon the railroad commissioners. Swinney v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 123 Iowa 219; State v. Mason City & Ft. D. R. Co., 85 Iowa 516; Herrstrom v. Newton & N. W. R. Co., 129 Iowa 507; Mattice v. Chicago, G. W. R. Co., 130 Iowa 749.

The point now made by the defendant is that, inasmuch as the previous statute was repealed and the statutory right to a crossing is enacted in a new form and such new enactment provides its own remedy, such remedy is necessarily exclusive.

It is doubtless true, as a general proposition, that, where a 'new. right is created by statute and a remedy is provided by the same statute for its enforcement, such remedy will ordinarily be deemed exclusive. This rule, however, does not support the argument for defendant. The new enactment does not purport to abridge any right of the plaintiff which he had under the previous statute. As already indicated, the previous statute is literally re-enacted. The re-enacting provision is in no manner qualified or diminished by what follows. Under the previous' statute as re-enacted, a plaintiff in such ease has an absolute statutory right to one adequate crossing. In our construction of the statute heretofore, we have held that such adequate crossing ordinarily means a grade crossing. "We have held also that, where an adequate grade crossing was practicable, the plaintiff was not entitled to an underground crossing, although an underground cross[236]*236ing might be, as it usually is, of much greater convenience and advantage to the plaintiff.

The additional provisions of the new enactment purport to go no further than to confer upon the railroad commissioners a certain power of discretion to make orders for more than one grade crossing or for an overhead or an underground crossing if they shall find the demands therefor to be “just and reasonable”. For the purpose of the argument only, it may be conceded that such discretion is not conferred upon the court.

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Related

O'Malley v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.
183 Iowa 749 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
173 Iowa 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michalek-v-cedar-rapids-iowa-city-railway-light-co-iowa-1915.