Rood v. City of Ames

60 N.W.2d 227, 244 Iowa 1138, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 377
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 22, 1953
Docket48289
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 60 N.W.2d 227 (Rood v. City of Ames) 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
Rood v. City of Ames, 60 N.W.2d 227, 244 Iowa 1138, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 377 (iowa 1953).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

Although chapter 391A of the 1950 Code of Iowa was repealed by chapter 156 of the Laws of the Fifty-fourth General Assembly, approved May 2,1951, during the construction period of the public improvement, the provisions of the repealed chapter control the determination of this action.

At a meeting of defendant’s council on December 11, 1950, adjourned from December 4, 1950, it adopted a resolution “Directing the Preparation of Preliminary Plans, Specifications, Plat and Schedule for Storm Sewer Improvement Program 1951.” The resolution provided that in subsequent proceedings the improvement should be known and designated as “Storm Sewer Improvement Program 1951.” After stating the necessity of the improvement program, the previous selection of J. H. Ames, the city manager, as the engineer in charge of the program, and “that the cost thereof be assessed to the property benefited thereby”, the resolution designated and described eight different projects to be included in the improvement.

The only one of the projects involved in this proceeding is the one referred to in the record as the “Sixteenth Street Storm *1141 Sewer District.” No other project was considered in the district court, nor will be considered in this court, as none of them affects the plaintiff’s property. Just below we set out an outline of that district improvised from one of the exhibits.

The scale of the plat is very close to 1 inch to 100 feet.

The lines intersected with cross marks designate the boundary line of the Sixteenth Street Storm Sewer District. The streets and avenues are marked with the broken lines.

*1142 The nine platted lots just south of 20th Street and across Burnett Avenue west of the school building in the northwest corner of the plat are in Friedrich’s 13th Addition. Lying just south of 16th Street between Burnett Avenue on the west, and Duff Avenue on the east, reading from left to right, are Blocks 4, 5 and 6 in Harriman’s Addition. There are forty-two lots in all — fourteen in each block. Bach lot is 60 feet north and south, and approximately 180 feet east and west. The unbroken north-south parallel lines in each block indicate alleys.

The first column of lots on our plat, just east of Duff Avenue and north of 14th Street is in Block 2 of Friedrich’s 5th Addition. Ten of them are 60 feet north and south and 202.4 feet east and west. The other six lots in this block do not have uniform dimensions and have lesser and different areas. Block 1 of Friedrich’s 5th Addition lies between 14th and 13th Streets and has but one lot in this sewer district — Lot 11 — the most southerly on the plat.

Immediately east of Block 2 in Friedrich’s 5th Addition, supra, Block 2 in Friedrich’s 6th Addition lies just west of Carroll Avenue and Block 3 in the same addition lies just east of it. Both abut on 14th Street. Block 2 has sixteen lots, nine of which are 60 feet by 202.4 feet and the other seven vary in dimensions and areas. Block 3 has fourteen lots, each 60 feet by 120 feet.

Bast of Friedrich’s 6th Addition is Friedrich’s ffth Addition, Block 1 of which lies west of Stafford Avenue, and Block 2 is east of it. Both abut on 14th Street. Each block has fourteen lots, twenty-four of which are 60 feet by 120 feet, and four are each about 75 feet by 120 feet.

All lots and tracts north of 16th Street, except Friedrich’s 13th Addition, west of the sehoolhouse are unplatted. The property of Mrs. Bood, the plaintiff, is a tract approximately 625 feet square, abutting Duff Avenue on the east and 16th Street on the south. All but a small rectangular piece in the northeast corner is in the district. While the area of the Bood 'land is referred to in the record as containing ten acres, the defendant computed its area as 404,536 square feet. Since there are 43,560 square feet in an acre, its area is approximately 9.2868 acres. *1143 It was assessed $3659.02. Calling its area 9.29 acres, the assessment per acre was approximately $393.86.

The natural drainage of all of the land north of 16th Street is to the south, southwest and some to the southeast. With respect to this drainage it is the dominant land or estate and all land in the district south of 16th Street is the servient estate. The Rood land is servient to very little, if any, other land. Mr. Rood testified that in the twenty-two years he had lived on the land he had never done anything to turn the water out of its natural course or to concentrate it, or to tile it onto land of anyone else, and that whatever water or rain came onto his land passed away in the course of nature. Taking a fireplug at the southwest corner of the intersection of 16th Street and Duff Avenue as the bench mark with an assumed elevation of 100, Mr. R. J. Lubsen, a member of the Civil Engineering Department of Iowa State College, a witness for plaintiff, took elevations on the Rood land and on the Gillogly land, lying east of it across Duff Avenue. There are two houses on the Rood land, one of which is near the northeast corner. The elevation at the northeast corner of the land is 116.1, and just southeast of the house on the property line the elevation is 113.5. From that point on the elevations gradually decrease until the elevation is 98.8 at the southeast corner of the Rood land. Just east of the southwest corner of the land closely adjacent to 16th Street is a small depression, referred to by the witnesses as a “pothole.” Mr. Lubsen found the area of the depression was twenty-one hundredths of an acre, having an elevation of 95.7 around its perimeter, and of about 95 at its lowest depth. The evidence without contradiction was that, except for this pothole, every foot of the Rood land has been high, dry and tillable at all times, with no water standing except in the small depression after heavy precipitation. The testimony of neighbors, of tenants of the Rood land, and of others, confirms this. Prof. R. E. Roudebush, of the mechanical engineering department of the college, had a garden in the northwest corner of the Rood acreage for four years, and was thoroughly familiar with all of the Rood land. He testified: “In all my coming and going on the Rood ten acres the only spot I have ever seen under water, rain or no rain, is that one spot, and a *1144 little patch in my garden for a couple of days that did not do any harm.”

Mr. Diehl has been the lessee of about five acres of the Rood land for some years, during which time he has raised gladioli bulbs for sale. He had close to twelve million bulbs growing there at the time he testified. He never lost any except the first year when he planted some ip the pothole. All of the Rood land drains to the south across 16th Street, except an estimated two or three acres which drains southwesterly onto the Nordmeyer and Tyselling lots. Of these two tracts, Mr. Rood testified: “* * * the north end of the Nordmeyer and Tyselling lots are all wet, not so much on the Nordmeyer, although they haven’t raised a crop there for the last two or three years because it is too wet. I don’t think Tyselling even put in any crop this year. * * * These lots have been too wet for cultivation.”

The C. J. Christensen land abuts the Tyselling land about midway on the west. It contains about .45 of an acre. It is marked on our plat with a “C”.

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Bluebook (online)
60 N.W.2d 227, 244 Iowa 1138, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rood-v-city-of-ames-iowa-1953.