Town of Hedrick v. Lanz

170 Iowa 437
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 17, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 170 Iowa 437 (Town of Hedrick v. Lanz) 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
Town of Hedrick v. Lanz, 170 Iowa 437 (iowa 1915).

Opinion

Gaynor, J.

1. Municipal CORPORATIONS : ordinance: validity : contravening policy Of state. The defendant was arrested for a violation of an ordinance in the city of Hedrick, tried and convicted, and from the judgment of conviction, appeals to this court.

In the information upon which he was convicted, it is alleged that on the 20th day of June, 1913, he wilfully and unlawfully drove a traction engine over, upon, and across a certain street crossing, without placing, and keeping continuously placed, a plank or planks under the wheels of said traction engine while driving the same over the crossing.

The ordinance under which he-was convicted provides:

“It shall be unlawful for any person or persons owning or operating a traction engine within the town limits of the incorporated town of Hedrick, Iowa, to cross any bridge, culvert, street crossing, or alley crossing, with such engine unless sound, strong planks, not less than one foot wide and two inches thick, be placed and kept continuously under the wheels of such engine while crossing such bridge, culvert, street or alley crossing; and no traction engine having mud lugs or ice spurs attached to its wheels shall be moved over any bridge, street, or alley crossing within the limits of the said incorporated town.”

The trial was had upon an agreed statement of facts, as follows: That on the 20th day of June, 1913, the defend[439]*439ant drove a traction engine over, upon and across a certain street crossing on the main street, within the corporate limits of the town of Hedrick, without continuously planking under the wheels of said engine while driving the same over the crossing; that there were no lugs or spurs attached to the wheels of the engine; that the wheels were shod with common traction engine cleats; that the walk over which the defendant passed was not damaged; that the weight of the engine was 15,400 pounds.

A jury was waived and the cause tried to the court. At the conclusion of the evidence, the defendant moved to be discharged for the following reasons:

1. That but for the ordinance, defendant has committed no offense.

2. That the passage of the ordinance was beyond the power of the city.

3. That the ordinance is contrary to and in violation of the state law.

4. That the ordinance seeks to prohibit that which the law of the state permits.

This motion was overruled, defendant convicted, and he appeals.

It will be conceded that, but for this ordinance, defendant committed no offense; that the state law does not prohibit the act committed.

The first question is, was the passage of this ordinance a valid exercise of delegated power?

Second, if, under the general power delegated to cities, it had the right, was the exercise of this right in contravention of the policy of the state as expressed in Chapter 102 of the Acts of the 33d General Assembly?

Sec. 1571 was in force at the time of the passage of Chapter 102 of the Acts of the 33d General Assembly, and, so far as this case is concerned, reads as follows:

“In crossing any bridge or culvert in the public road, [440]*440or plank street crossing in any city or town, four strong planks not less than twelve feet long, each one foot wide and two inches thick, shall be used, by placing and keeping continuously two of them under the wheels. ”

A violation of this statute was a misdemeanor.

Chapter 102 of the Acts of the 33d General Assembly by its terms repeals Sec. 1571 above set out.

Sec. 2 thereof provides: “Until the 1st day of November, 1910, no traction engine shall cross any bridge, crossing or culvert in the public highway or street, unless sound, strong planks not less than one foot wide and two inches thick be placed and kept continuously under the wheels. No traction engine having mud lugs or ice spurs attached to its wheels shall be moved over any bridge, culvert, or street crossing.”

It is apparent from the reading of Sec. 2, above quoted, that it was the purpose and intent of the legislature not to require the use of planks, either as provided in Sec. 1571 or as provided in Sec. 2 of Chapter 102 of the Acts of the 33d General Assembly, after November 1, 1910.

After the 1st of November, 1910, therefore, the state law did not require placing-of planks under the wheels of traction engines when crossing over bridges, culverts and street crossings, except such traction engines as were encumbered with mud lugs or ice spurs.

Sec. 1571 of the Code Supplement of 1907 was a statute suggested by conditions. These heavy engines, passing over bridges or culverts on public roads and plank street crossings in cities, were found to have broken, destroyed or injured bridges, culverts, and plank street crossings. The inhibition did not extend to the use of the streets and highways generally. The regulation related only to a time and place in which they were crossing bridges, culverts, or plank street [441]*441crossings. Then it was that these heavy planks were required to be placed under the wheels.

As the use of traction engines in the country became more general, it was found that this provision requiring the use of planks at these particular points necessitated the carrying of planks with the engines, a very cumbersome and inconvenient thing to do, although the use of them was only required at these particular points. Then it was, we presume, that the legislature, observing the burden that this law east upon the owners and drivers of traction engines, concluded that it would be better to require the public authorities to so construct their bridges, culverts, and street crossings that these engines might pass over them without the usé of planks, and hence passed Chapter 102 above. But apprehending that the condition was not ripe for the use of these engines without these planks over these particular portions of the road, it gave the municipalities until the 1st of November, 1910, to so prepare the bridges, culverts, and crossings that the engines, might pass in safety over them, without the use of the planks. Hence the legislature said, “Until the 1st of November, 1910, the traction engines shall not be permitted to cross without the planks.”

After the 1st of November, it inferentially or impliedly said that this requirement on public roads would be dispensed with, except where the engine was encumbered with mud lugs or ice spurs attached to the wheels.

When the legislature said, the prohibition shall extend to the 1st of November, 1910, it impliedly said to the public, the inhibition shall not be enforced after November 1,1910; that thereafter traction engines, unencumbered with mud lugs or ice spurs, shall have the freedom of the public highways the same as other vehicles, both in public highways of the cities and outside the cities as well.

It is common. knowledge that all public highways are under the control of the state; that all power of lesser municipalities over such streets is simply a delegated power from [442]*442the state, whether exercised by a county, a city, or a town. It follows, therefore, that no municipality has power .to make any law affecting public highways or their use which contravenes the policy of the state touching such control and use.

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Related

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240 N.W. 745 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1932)
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170 Iowa 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-hedrick-v-lanz-iowa-1915.