Swartzwelter v. Iowa Southern Utilities Corp.

250 N.W. 121, 216 Iowa 1060
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 26, 1933
DocketNo. 41821.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 250 N.W. 121 (Swartzwelter v. Iowa Southern Utilities Corp.) 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
Swartzwelter v. Iowa Southern Utilities Corp., 250 N.W. 121, 216 Iowa 1060 (iowa 1933).

Opinion

Donegan, J.

Some time prior to the 26th day of March, 1931, the Iowa' Southern Utilities Corporation communicated with A. R. Bartell, county engineer of Lucas county, Iowa, in regard to the location of a transmission line of said corporation along a certain road known as “County Road C”, which extends southward from the *1062 town of Russell in said county. Said Bartell, county engineer, advised said utilities corporation that work was contemplated upon said road and that, before locating its transmission line thereon, it would be advisable to have the lines of said highway accurately established so that it might not be necessary to move said transmission line after the improvement on said road should be made. An arrangement was accordingly made by the manager of the utilities corporation with the county engineer to meet on said highway along which said transmission line was to be constructed, so that the county engineer could give the utilities corporation the proper highway lines and the location of the transmission line. It was also arranged that the utilities corporation would furnish said county engineer with such help as he might require in establishing said highway lines. Pursuant to such arrangement, the county engineer proceeded to the town of Russell in an automobile belonging to said county, on the morning of March 26, 1931. There he picked up a Mr. Ferguson, who was the foreman of a construction crew employed by the utilities corporation, and proceeded southward to a point about three-fourths of a mile to a mile south of said town. The utilities corporation also sent a number of linemen and employees constituting a construction crew to the same point in said highway, and during a part of the time a Mr. Adams, who was an engineer of the utilities corporation, was present, but took no active part in the work that was there performed. The county engineer selected a point in said road near which he believed it would be possible to find a section corner stone, and from this corner stone he planned to be able to locate the road lines on either side. In making the measurements by which he arrived at the point near which he believed this corner stone was located, he was assisted by the utilities corporation’s foreman, Ferguson, and when the point at which he thought this section corner stone would be found was ascertained, the work of digging in the road to try to discover such stone was performed by employees of the utilities corporation. It is undisputed that the assistance given by Mr. Ferguson, foreman of the utilities corporation, and ¡by the workmen who did the digging, was without any compensation being paid by Lucas county. It also appears without question that all this work was done under the direction of said Bartell, county engineer of Lucas county. In trying to locate the section corner stone a ditch about two feet wide, about six or seven feet in length east and west, and about eighteen inches deep, was *1063 dug across the traveled portion of the highway before such corner stone was finally located near the eastern extremity of such ditch. Said corner stone was not discovered until some time after noon on said 26th day of March, and shortly thereafter the ditch or hole which had been dug was filled up.

Between 1 and 2 o’clock on the afternoon of the following day, March 27th, the plaintiff, Anna Swartzwelter, was riding with her son in an automobile driven by him, going northward in said highway toward the town of Russell. There had been a fall of snow during the preceding night and during a part of this day, which had turned into rain, and all depressions along the road were filled with water. As the car in which Mrs. Swartzwelter was riding came to the place where the ditch had been dug across the traveled portion of the highway, it encountered a depression which caused Mrs. Swartzwelter to be thrown against the top of the automobile, whereby she sustained serious injuries. For the damages which she claims to have thus sustained, she instituted suit in the district court of Lucas county against Iowa Southern Utilities Corporation and A. R. Bartell, county engineer of Lucas county. Both defendants filed answers in which they admitted that the utilities corporation is a corporation carrying on business of a public utility in the state of Iowa, and that the defendant A. R. Bartell is the county engineer of Lucas county, Iowa; but denied each and every other allegation contained in plaintiff’s petition. Trial was had to a jury, and at the close of plaintiff’s evidence the defendants filed separate motions for a directed verdict. Each of these motions contained several grounds and both of said motions were sustained by the trial court. From such ruling the plaintiff appeals.

I. As both of said motions were sustained generally, the order of the trial court directing a verdict was correct, if there was any ground in each of said motions upon which such order was properly based. One of the grounds urged by the Iowa Southern Utilities Corporation in support of its motion for a directed verdict was:

“Because the evidence is insufficient to make a fact question for the jury as to any negligence charged against this defendant.”

Appellant contends that the appellee Bartell, county engineer, was acting without legal authority in causing said ditch to be dug in said highway; that the defendant Iowa Southern Utilities Corporation, in causing its employees to do the work of digging said *1064 ditch, was also without any legal authority to do such work; and that both defendants are, therefore, liable for any negligence connected with the dangerous condition thus created. Appellant claims that said Bartell was acting without authority because, in causing and supervising the work of such digging for the purpose of locating the transmission line of the appellee Iowa Southern Utilities Corporation, he was acting without any written application having been filed with the county auditor, as provided by section 4838 of the Code. Appellee meets this argument with the statement that the record is silent as to whether or not any such written application had been made, and that, even if no such application had been filed with the county auditor, this was not a jurisdictional prerequisite to the location of the transmission line in the highway by the county engineer. Appellant does not allege that the appellee Iowa Southern Utilities Corporation had not procured a franchise for the erection of such transmission line along the highway in question, as required by the provisions of chapter 383 of the Code (section 8309 et seq.). Appellee Iowa Southern Utilities Corporation alleges in argument that such franchise had been procured. In the absence of any evidence to the contrary, it will not be presumed that the appellee Iowa Southern Utilities Corporation was violating any law and was proceeding to erect its transmission line on said highway without having procured such franchise; nor, in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, will it be presumed that either of the defendants was violating any law, if the law required that a written application be filed with the county auditor before such transmission line could be located by the county engineer along the road in question.

Moreover, we do not agree with the contention of the appellant that the filing of such application with the county auditor is jurisdictional.

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Bluebook (online)
250 N.W. 121, 216 Iowa 1060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swartzwelter-v-iowa-southern-utilities-corp-iowa-1933.