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

184 Iowa 689
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 18, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 184 Iowa 689 (Waterloo, Cedar Falls & Northern Railway Co. v. Burrell) 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
Waterloo, Cedar Falls & Northern Railway Co. v. Burrell, 184 Iowa 689 (iowa 1918).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

1. Eminent domain: recovery by condemnor of damages assessed and paid. The petition states, in substance, that, in 1912, the plaintiff, a railway corporation, was engaged in building an interurban railway between the cities of Waterloo and Cedar Rapids, when the defendant, being the owner of lands on or near said line, represented to plaintiff that he desired said railway to b.e located south of a certain house, on what is spoken of as the old home place, and south of a certain described highway, and orally offered, as an inducement or consideration for adopting said location, that he would furnish defendant, free of charge or other consideration, a right of way 100 feet wide, along the course requested by him, across [691]*691and over three certain described tracts or farms, aggregating several hundred acres in extent. It is further alleged that plaintiff orally accepted such offer, and located and built its road upon the line designated by the defendant, but that defendant failed and refused to pay for such right of way, thereby compelling plaintiff to incur an expense of $6,680 to obtain the same; and judgment is asked against the defendant for the sum named, with interest.

The defendant denies- the claim made against him, and pleads the Statute of Frauds. He further alleges that, in March, 1913, after the date of the alleged contract, plaintiff began statutory proceedings to condemn a right of way across and over said lands, or the greater portion thereof, naming the defendant as the owner thereof, and alleging its inability to agree with him upon the compensation to be paid for said right of way; that a jury was duly summoned, and assessed damages in defendant’s favor in the sum of $3,500; that the company, having paid thp award into court, appealed to the district court, where the matter was tried on the plaintiff’s application for the condemnation, and without the consideration or trial of any other issue, with the result that the award of the sheriff’s jury was confirmed; and, on the company’s further appeal to 'this court, it was again affirmed. On April 25, 1916, the plaintiff company paid into court the further sum of $1,005.78, being the remainder due upon the award of damages; and thereupon, the full amount of the award, with interest and costs, was paid to and received by the defendant herein. The right of way so taken and paid for is the same right of way which the plaintiff in this case alleges that the defendant agreed to give or furnish to it, without cost or charge. Upon this showing, defendant alleges that, plaintiff having instituted the condemnation proceedings, representing the defendant to be the owner of said lands, with whom it was unable to agree upon the price to be paid [692]*692for the right of way, and having litigated the issue so raised through the district court and Supreme Court, having paid the award and taken possession of the land, which it continues to hold under and by virtue of such condemnation, it is estopped now to say that such payment was wrongfully exacted, or to base thereon any claim- for damages against the defendant.

Assuming that a contract was made substantially as pleaded, there is room for argument upon the question whether plaintiff made sufficient showing of having fairly complied with the terms upon which the defendant undertook to give or provide the described right of way ; but, in view of our conclusion upon the issue raised by the affirmative defense, as hereinafter set forth, this and other questions relating to the negotiations, acts, and conduct of the parties prior to the condemnation, may be passed without discussion or decision.

We come, then, directly to the vital issue in this case. May the plaintiff, having condemned the right of way over and across defendant’s land, and having caused his damages to be assessed, and having paid them, then turn about, bring him into a court of law, and compel him to repay to it the sáme or an equal sum as damages for refusing to convey the right of way without condemnation ? Or, putting the inquiry in another form, may the company, in the condemnation proceedings, concede the right of defendant to damages, and pay them, and at the same time retain or reserve a right of action against him, based upon a denial of his right to receive them? To our mind, the contention of counsel for appellee, that, upon defendant’s refusal to convey the right of way according to the alleged agreement, it had the right to pursue either of two remedies, either an action in equity for specific performance, or an action at law for damages, and that plaintiff’s subsequent resort to condemnation proceedings was not an election of [693]*693remedies, but, at most, was but an abandonment oí its equitable remedy, leaving its legal right to recover damages unimpaired, does not avoid the difficulties into which an affirmative answer to the foregoing inquiry inevitably leads. Let it be conceded that, by proceeding to condemn the right of way, plaintiff made no election of remedies, it is still manifestly true that, if its act in subsequently condemning the right of way is wholly inconsistent with any reliance upon defendant’s alleged agreement to convey free of charge for damages, its course in this respect operates as an abandonment or waiver of its right to pursue either remedy. If, in fact, as plaintiff claims, it did have a valid and enforcible contract for a conveyance of the right of way without charge, then defendant was not entitled to damages in any sum, and plaintiff was under no requirement or necessity to condemn. It chose, however, to meet defendant on his own ground, and procured the assessment of his damages and paid them. It could have sought specific performance, but did not do so; it could have sued at law for damages, but did not do it; it could have proceeded to the construction of its road upon the designated line without first appealing to the law, and have made use of its alleged contract in defense of any action or proceeding brought by the defendant to prevent the construction or to recover damages on account of such appropriation of the right of way. This is clearly pointed out in our opinion on the appeal from the assessment of damages. Burrell v. Waterloo, C. F. & N. R. Co., 173 Iowa 441. If the company, finding its alleged contract denied by the defendant, thought it advisable to avoid the annoyance and expense of attempting to enforce it by suit in equity or action at law, it was, of course, entirely within its privilege to waive or abandon its claim to a conveyance without payment of damages, and proceed to procure the desired right of way by coming to an agreement [694]*694with defendant upon the price and paying it; or, if agreement could not be reached, by instituting condemnation proceedings, and paying the jury’s award of damages. The plaintiff’s course in this respect was wholly voluntary, and we can conceive of no rule or principle of law by which the act of the defendant, in receiving the damages assessed in his favor on plaintiff’s application, and voluntarily paid into court for his benefit, can be held to be a legal wrong, or afford any ground upon which to plant another action for the repayment of the money.

This is by no means a novel question; for controversies more or less similar in character have quite frequently found their way into the courts, and have also had the attention of law writers. See Randolph on Eminent Domain, Section 251; Lewis on Eminent Domain (2d Ed.), Sections 441, 660; Rippe v. Chicago, D. & M. R. Co., 23 Minn. 18; Town of Princetown v. Templeton, 71 Ill. 68; Omaha, N.

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Bluebook (online)
184 Iowa 689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waterloo-cedar-falls-northern-railway-co-v-burrell-iowa-1918.