Perkins v. Palo Alto County

60 N.W.2d 562, 245 Iowa 310, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 453
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 20, 1953
Docket48301
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 60 N.W.2d 562 (Perkins v. Palo Alto 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
Perkins v. Palo Alto County, 60 N.W.2d 562, 245 Iowa 310, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 453 (iowa 1953).

Opinion

Mulroney, J.

— Plaintiff owns eighty acres in Section 17 in West Bend Township in Palo Alto County, which is bounded on the west and south by county roads. In April 1951 he filed his petition in equity against the defendant County, the Board of Supervisors, and the individual members thereof, alleging that defendants graded the road along the south side of his land (sometimes called the West Bend Road) across a natural, north to south, watercourse without putting a culvert through such grade, and without putting in an adequate ditch to take the water, thus backing up the water and flooding his land. The petition also alleged two gate-fill approaches to plaintiff’s land, one in Section 17, and one in Section 16 to the east had been removed by the road improvement and not put back. The prayer was for a mandatory injunction requiring defendants to put a culvert through the road to the south of his eighty in the natural watercourse; the installation of the gate-fill approaches to his land in Sections 16 and 17; the abatement of the nuisance of the flooding of his land; and actual damages in the sum of $5400 and $1000 exemplary damages against one member of the board of supervisors. The petition also alleged plaintiff owned another eighty acres in Section 20 in the same township where a gate-fill approach from the county road was necessary and it sought to require defendants to install it.

Upon motion of defendants the court struck all allegations *313 material to plaintiff’s claim for damages, and defendants then answered, tendering the two gate-fill approaches to plaintiff’s land in Sections 16 and 17, denying the necessity of the third in Section 20, and denying other allegations in the petition, specifically pleading, however, that the roadside ditch adjacent to the west and south sides of plaintiff’s eighty in Section 17 was the watercourse to carry the water east to the Des Moines River; that this watercourse had been in existence since 1917 when it was constructed at the request of, and with the acquiescence and consent of, the then owner of plaintiff’s land, and that plaintiff had knowledge of the continuous existence of said watercourse and by virtue of its continuous existence since 1917 it had become a natural watercourse.

The trial court found that prior to 1917 a natural watercourse entered plaintiff’s land on the northwest side, flowing generally in a southeasterly direction across the land and under a bridge in the West Bend Road and on south to a lake. The court went on to find that in 1917 the highway along the west and south sides of plaintiff’s land was regraded and the bridge on the south road was removed and the roadside ditches constructed to carry the water around the edge of the eig’hty instead of across it, which diverted the water from the natural watercourse, and carried it on east to the Des Moines River. The court found the artificial watercourse was constructed at the request of Lafe Hinton, the then owner of plaintiff’s eighty (which plaintiff purchased from Hinton in 1934) and that plaintiff who had always lived in the area had personal knowledge of the new watercourse before and after it was constructed. The court held the roadside ditch watercourse was now the natural watercourse and plaintiff was not entitled to have a culvert constructed under the south road to carry the water in the old watercourse south to the lake. The court also found there was no showing of the necessity for the gate fill in Section 20, but decreed the county should replace the gate fills leading to plaintiff’s property in Sections 16 and 17, and assessed court costs, two thirds to plaintiff and one third to defendants. Plaintiff appeals, and the first proposition he relies upon for reversal is that the court erred in denying the gate fill in Section 20.

*314 I. Plaintiff’s eighty acres in Section 20 is referred to in the evidence as the south eighty and his eighty acres in Section 17 is referred to as the north eighty. His home and farm buildings are located on the south eighty, approximately forty rods west of the northeast corner of the eighty. The north eighty is mostly used for pasture. Plaintiff testified that there had always been a gate at the northeast corner of the south eighty opening onto the road that leads north to the north eighty, which was used for entrance from the highway for stock as the ditch was not deep, but when this road was graded and the ditch deepened the entrance could not be used and the stock had to be driven forty rods west of the corner on the highway to the farm buildings. It does not clearly appear in the evidence when this road was graded but there is some indication it was in the fall of 1950. Plaintiff testified that in his farming operations he had to drive his stock on the road a good deal between the home and pasture eighties — sometimes as much as each night and morning when he had sheep and there was danger from dogs if the sheep were left in the pasture at night. He said the road west from this gate was up a steep hill and there was danger from cars which would be eliminated if there was a gate fill across the deep ditch to the corner gate.

There seems to be no question but that the deepened ditch in 1950 successfully blocked an existing stock entrance to plaintiff’s land at the corner gate. Section 308A.16, Code, 1950, provides that officers in charge of highway improvements shall not “destroy or injure reasonable ingress or egress to any property.” The trial court held plaintiff’s showing as to the necessity of the gate fill at this corner gate was nothing more than a showing of convenience to him, and denied relief. The real question is whether the highway improvement destroyed reasonable ingress and egress at this corner gate. We think the evidence shows it did. It is true the corner gate is not far from the entrance to the farm buildings but that entrance is on another road and up a hill and in any event it certainly destroyed a highway entrance that had existed, and under the record was much used, for many years prior to its destruction by the road improvement. What would be “reasonable ingress and egress” *315 to the property from the highway would not be capable of precise definition, but as good a test as any would certainly be one that existed and was used in normal farm operations for many years prior to the improvement. We hold plaintiff entitled to the relief asked with respect to the gate-fill approach from the highway to his land in Section 20.

II. Plaintiff’s second proposition is that the court erred in holding that the ditch along the west and south sides of his north eighty had by use and acquiescence become the natural watercourse. The record fully supports this finding by the trial court. Lafe Hinton testified that he requested the roadside ditch watercourse in 1917 and the County put it in. There is no need to review the other evidence for plaintiff admitted the roadside ditch waterway to the Des Moines River had been carrying the water since 1917. He said: “At that time when I bought the land the water ran around the corner around the west side of the box culvert near the northwest corner of my north eighty instead of across my land. It had run around there since ’17, maybe before, anyway since that time.”

The trial court was right in holding the roadside ditch watercourse was now the natural watercourse. Nixon v. Welch, 238 Iowa 34, 24 N.W.2d 476, 169 A. L. R. 1141.

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Bluebook (online)
60 N.W.2d 562, 245 Iowa 310, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-palo-alto-county-iowa-1953.