Reed v. Iowa State Highway Commission

266 N.W. 47, 221 Iowa 500
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 17, 1936
DocketNo. 43249.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 266 N.W. 47 (Reed v. Iowa State Highway Commission) 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
Reed v. Iowa State Highway Commission, 266 N.W. 47, 221 Iowa 500 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

Charles R. Reed, the owner of the property hereinafter described, commenced this action to restrain the highway commission and others from entering upon, condemning, appropriating, and taking 5.22 acres of his land, with the improvements thereon, for highway purposes. Injunctive relief was asked on the ground that the proposed condemnation and appropriation was unlawful, arbitrary, and oppressive in the following particulars:

(1) The proposed appropriation and construction constituted a rounding of the corner of appellee’s property where his dwelling house and other improvements are located, contrary to the provisions of section 4755-b27 of the Code of Iowa of 1931.

(2) The proposed taking was excessive in amount, not all necessary for highway purposes, and, as proposed, was a subterfuge and an attempt to evade the statutory prohibition against rounding a corner.

(3) Complete surveys, plans, and specifications for the work had not been prepared and filed as provided in section 4755-b9 of the Code of 1931.

(4) Plaintiff’s property is wholly within the incorporated town of Colo, Iowa, and the consent of the town council to the proposed construction had not been obtained as required by section 4755-b26 of the Code of Iowa of 1931.,

The defendants answered, admitting their intention to appropriate a tract of plaintiff’s property for right of way purposes, with the improvements thereon, in the amount and shape set out in the petition, and their intention to construct thereon public improvements of the kind charged, but alleged that the ground sought to be condemned was necessary and the taking thereof *502 within the reasonable discretion of the highway commission, and denied their proposed appropriation and construction constituted the rounding of a corner within the statutory prohibition, and denied that it ivas illegal in any other respect.

It was agreed in open court that an action in equity for an injunction was the proper way to raise the question and determine the controversy.

The trial court held :

(1) That the amount of land proposed to be taken was within the reasonable discretion of the highway commission;

(2) That there had been no fatal omission to prepare and file surveys, plans, and specifications;

(3) That the situation was not such as to require the apjiroving action of the town council of Colo; and

(4) That the proposed appropriation and construction did constitute the rounding of a corner, within the legislative prohibition ;

And granted the injunctive relief prayed for. Plaintiff did not appeal. Defendants have appealed.

It therefore follows that the only question, before this court is the one which was decided adverse to the defendants, to wit, that the proposed appropriation and construction did constitute the rounding of a corner within the legislative prohibition, upon which ground alone the lower court granted the injunction prayed for.

The appellee Reed owns lot B of Blair’s addition to the town of Colo, in Story county, Iowa. This lot contains a little over 14^ acres, and is. rectangular in shape, located in the extreme northeast corner of section 8, township 83, range 21, New Albany township. A dwelling* house and other buildings are located in the northeast corner of the lot, upon the tract sought to be appropriated by the highway commission. Outside of the lawn and other grounds adjacent to the dwelling house, the lot is under cultivation as farm land. The house is occupied by a tenant of the owner, who is employed by appellee to assist in the operation of an oil station and lunch counter located just across the road north and a little west.

About thirty years ago there was a street opened and used, running east and west along the south line of the Reed lot, and also, one fenced off and used running north and south on the section line along the east side of the lot. The road running *503 north and south along the east line of the lot, however, ivas fenced and has not been used as a highway since 1866, since which time it has been under cultivation.

Federal Highway No. 30 (the Lincoln Highway) runs east and west along the north side of the Reed property. Federal Highway No. 65 (the Jefferson Highway), coming from the north, makes a “T” intersection with Highway No. 30 at the northeast corner of section 8 and the northwest corner of section 9. Until a few years ago traffic on No. 65 came down and made a square turn when passing on to route No. 30. However, the highway commission acquired the right of way for and constructed two curved roadways, branching off from No. 65 some 850 feet north of highway No. 30. One of these roadways curved to the west on about a six-degree curve and connected with Highway No. 30 about 850 feet west of the old intersection. The other made a similar curve to the east and connected with route No. 30 about 850 feet east of the old intersection. Highways No. 30 and 65 and these curved wings were all approximately 100 feet wide. The triangular portion of ground enclosed by the original roads No. 30 and 65, and the curved wings, were not acquired by the highway commission and are still privately owned.

Primary Highway No. 64, coming from the south, runs along 1he line between sections 8 and 9, for some distance, until it reaches a point about a quarter of a mile south of the point in controversy, where it turns into the streets of Colo. It is the plan of the highway commission to extend this highway north along the section line, under the Northwestern Railroad tracks, to intersect Highway No. 30 and connect with Federal Highway No. 65 at the northeast corner of section 8, where Highways No. 30 and 65 now intersect. In connection with this extension they propose to construct curved .wings or roadways similar to those now constructed north of Highway No. 30. The one on the Reed land will begin about 850 feet south of Highway, No. 30, at Reed’s southeast corner, and will then run on a six-degree curve a distance of about 1,500 feet to Reed’s northwest corner. The right of way for this curve will be 100 feet wide. The travelable portion of the road will be 34 feet, and the paved portion of it will be 20 feet.

In seeking to appropriate the land that the highway commission deemed necessary for present and future use for high *504 way purposes, it desires to acquire all of the land within the triangles formed by Highway No. 30, the proposed extension of No. 64 to the north, and the curved wings of the right of way above referred to. The total amount of land belonging to Reed sought to be acquired is 5.22 acres.

The trial court held that the amount of land proposed to be taken was within the reasonable discretion of the highway commission. Appellee does not complain of this finding, and therefore we are not confronted with that question.

The situation at the point in controversy is a little bit difficult to describe but comparatively easy to illustrate. The following outline drawing will clarify the description:

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Bluebook (online)
266 N.W. 47, 221 Iowa 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-iowa-state-highway-commission-iowa-1936.