Jenkins v. State Highway Commission

Decision Date12 March 1929
Docket Number39534
Citation224 N.W. 66,208 Iowa 620
PartiesWILLIAM D. JENKINS, Appellee, v. STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION, Appellant
CourtIowa Supreme Court

REHEARING DENIED JUNE 24, 1929.

Appeal from Boone District Court.--O. J. HENDERSON, Judge.

Proceedings for condemnation of right of way for primary road. The jury awarded $ 20,000 damages. The state highway commission appeals.

Reversed.

John Fletcher, Attorney-general, Gerald O. Blake, Assistant Attorney-general, and T. J. Mahoney, for appellant.

Helsell Helsell & McCall and John A. Hull, for appellee.

MORLING J. ALBERT, C. J., and STEVENS, DE GRAFF, and WAGNER, JJ concur.

OPINION

MORLING, J.

The right of way sought to be condemned would occupy about 14 acres, east and west, through plaintiff's farm of 456 acres. The farm lies a short distance west of Boone, and consists of the west half of Section 36 and the southeast quarter of Section 35, with some deductions. There are upon it 280 acres of cultivated and 175 acres of pasture land, mostly on "first bottom" of Des Moines River, but not subject to overflow. The general direction of the proposed right of way is somewhat irregularly east and west and south of west. On the east side, the right of way begins about 70 rods south of the center of Section 36, with a width of 80 feet. Somewhat more than half of the highway from the east is through cultivated fields. On the north of the farm is the Des Moines River, running in an easterly direction. South of the river and between it and the cultivated land are timber and pasture, which on the west extend south to the right of way. The west 160 rods of the right of way are through pasture and timber, and extend into the bluffs or hills of which the west part of the farm consists. The farm is intersected by a highway, extending from the easterly part of the south line northwestwardly, also by a little used highway, extending from the center of Section 36 west one-half mile, thence southwestwardly to the highway first mentioned. The buildings are about in the center east and west, but nearer the south than the north line, and some 40 or 50 rods north of the proposed primary road. They are at about the west end of the cultivated land. Some of them are quite old, and they are ordinary in size and construction. There is a tenant house southwest of the buildings and a schoolhouse about 80 rods south of them and on the south side of the new road. The hills to the west of the buildings, according to plaintiff's testimony, are "not over 25 feet higher than" his windmill. He says:

"The pasture west and northwest and southwest of my house is more hilly than on the river bottom. There is about 35 acres of river land on the original Jenkins farm that has never been broken up, and between that and the house are hills and valleys."

He speaks of finding gravel in two places, but says that, on the Holms farm, which is a later acquisition than the original farm:

"I do not know...

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