Smith v. Waterloo, Cedar Falls & Northern Railway Co.

191 Iowa 668
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 12, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 191 Iowa 668 (Smith v. Waterloo, Cedar Falls & Northern Railway 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
Smith v. Waterloo, Cedar Falls & Northern Railway Co., 191 Iowa 668 (iowa 1921).

Opinion

Faville, J.

The appellant is the owner of a three-acre tract of land in Cold Stream Farm Addition to the city of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The appellee operates an interurban railway. In 1913, the appellee was about to construct its railway in the vicinity of the city of Cedar Rapids. It desired to lay its tracks along a certain private road, which is now known and designated as “Madison Street,’’ and which highway was adjacent to the appellant’s property. The appellee desired to secure from the owners of real estate lying adjacent to Madison Street an agreement for a widening of said street from 40 to 60 feet and a waiver of any claim for damages -for the laying of its tracks and the operation of its line along said street. Through •an agent, the appellee secured from the appellant and others who were owners of property abutting upon said street a written instrument by which they agreed to convey .to the public for street and highway purposes 10 feet in width from their respective lots, to enable the appellee to construct and maintain its tracks in said Madison Street; and also by said instrument the said parties waived all damages which they might suffer by reason of the construction of railway tracks in said street. Thereafter, the appellee constructed its railway tracks along said street and continued to maintain the same and to operate its railway thereon. This action was brought by the appellant to obtain a cancellation of the said contract, on the ground that the same was obtained by fraud and misrepresentation on the part of the agent of the appellee. Appellant, in his petition, also prayed for damages suffered by reason of the construction and maintenance of said railway tracks and the operation of the appellee’s cars over the same.

[670]*670ebkok: waiver: stricken portion of petition. [669]*669I. The first question for our consideration upon this appeal is one of practice. The appellant’s petition charged the [670]*670procuring of the contract referred to, and that the same was obtained by fraud, misrepresentation, and deceit. In separate paragraphs of the petition, the appellant alleged that he had suffered dam-ageg various ways. In one paragraph, it is alleged that the agent of the appellee, at the time of procuring the contract, promised the appellant that the tracks of the ap-pellee, when constructed, would be ballasted level with the top of the rails, and it was alleged that the appellee had failed so to do, and that appellant had been caused inconveniences and had suffered damages thereby. In another paragraph, it was alleged that the agent of the appellee, at said time, promised the appellant that the railway company would stop its cars and take on passengers along Madison Street, and that the company did not do so. It was also alleged that, by reason of the operation of appellee’s locomotive engines along said line, the appellant and his family were unable to sleep and get proper rest; that the cars were operated in a reckless, careless, and dangerous manner; that, in ballasting said road, the ballast was distributed in a reckless and careless manner, and appellant’s house was injured because thereof; and that the appellee, without authority, had operated locomotive steam engines and freight trains, along said street. Because of these matters, the appellant prayed an award in damages. On motion of the appellee, the paragraphs of the appellant’s petition setting up these matters were stricken, and thereafter the parties proceeded to trial.

The appellant now urges that the court erred in sustaining the appellee’s motion to strike from the appellant’s petition the paragraphs containing the allegations in respect to the aforesaid matters. In behalf of the appellee, it is urged that the appellant, having proceeded to trial after the motion to strike from his petition had been sustained, waived the error, if any there were, in the sustaining of the said motion to strike.

We have repeatedly held that, upon a ruling on a motion or a demurrer, if the party against whom the ruling was entered afterwards pleads over or otherwise waives the adverse ruling, he cannot urge the same as error upon appeal. Warren v. Scott, 32 Iowa 22; Coakley v. McCarty, 34 Iowa 105; Denby v. Fie, [671]*671106 Iowa 299; Hunn v. Ashton, 121 Iowa 265; Mann v. Taylor, 78 Iowa 355; Heiman v. Felder, 178 Iowa 740; Northwestern Trad. Co. v. Western L. S. Ins. Co., 180 Iowa 878; Crow v. Casady, 192 Iowa —

It is urged that this rale applies in the instant ease, and that the appellant, by proceeding to trial after the motion to strike portions of his petition had been sustained, waived any error in the ruling on said motion, and cannot now be heard to complain thereof. We do not think that, by proceeding to trial upon his petition, without amending, after the motion to strike portions thereof had been sustained, the appellant waived his right to urge the alleged error in the sustaining of said motion, upon appeal from final judgment. It appears that proper exceptions were preserved by the appellant to the ruling on the motion to strike from the petition. He filed no amendment thereafter, but saved his exception to said ruling, and proceeded to trial upon the issues that remained in his petition. By so doing, he does not estop himself from urging the alleged error in the ruling on said motion. In Jones v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., 36 Iowa 68, we said:

“The appeal was taken within six months from the date of the final judgment, and properly brings up for review all questions properly saved by exception and not waived by pleading or otherwise.”

See, also, Schoenhofen Brew. Co. v. Giffey, 162 Iowa 204.

In State v. Des Moines City R. Co., 135 Iowa 694, we said:

“It is certainly not the policy of the law to permit either party to a controversy to prolong litigation and embarrass the course of justice by prosecuting an appeal from every interlocutory ruling of the trial court. Bank v. Dutcher, 128 Iowa 425. Ordinarily, every substantial right of the parties can be effectually protected by preserving a proper record and presenting the questions thus saved upon appeal from final judgment. ’ ’

See, also, Northwestern Trad. Co. v. Western L. S. Ins. Co., 180 Iowa 878, and McClurg & Walker v. McEvoy, 188 Iowa 752.

The situation is altogether different from one where a party pleads over, or in any other manner acquiesces in the ruling, or [672]*672estops himself from claiming error. We hold that the appellant did not lose the right to a review of the ruling on the ap-pellee’s motion t<? strike from his petition by proceeding to trial thereafter, where he filed no amendment to his petition relative to the subject-matter stricken, nor otherwise waived the right to urge the alleged error on appeal.

2 actions • equitable wRR7 purely legal. II. Was the ruling erroneous, however! As before stated, the appellant’s action was brought in equity, for the purpose of obtaining a cancellation of the written contract procured from him by the agent of the appellee. The matters alleged in appellant’s petition, which were stricken therefrom on the appellee’s motion, were not germane to the main cause of action pleaded by the appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
191 Iowa 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-waterloo-cedar-falls-northern-railway-co-iowa-1921.