Court Opinion

ID: 9400169
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-06-07 16:06:35.911481+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:19:42.707388
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                     No. 22-1312
                                 Filed June 7, 2023

CITY OF TIFFIN,
      Plaintiff-Appellant,

vs.

CITY OF CORALVILLE,
      Defendant-Appellee.
_________________________________

CITY OF CORALVILLE,
      Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

CITY OF TIFFIN, IOWA,
      Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________

        Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County, Jason D. Besler,

Judge.

        A municipality appeals the denial of its petition for declaratory judgment.

REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.

        Robert W. Goodwin of Goodwin Law Office, P.C., Ames, and Crystal K.

Raiber and Robert S. Michael of Holland, Michael, Raiber & Sittig PLC, Iowa City,

for appellant.

        Kevin D. Olson, Coralville, for appellee.

        Heard by Bower, C.J., and Tabor and Greer, JJ. Chicchelly, J., takes no

part.
                                           2

GREER, Judge.

       In the never-ending saga of Forevergreen Road,1 we are again wrestling

with a stalemate over the City of Tiffin’s ability to extend that road over

undeveloped real estate in Johnson County to reach a new Interstate 380

interchange. The stalemate pits the interests of Tiffin against the mutual interests

of the Ruth E. Rarick Trust (the Trust), which owns land in Johnson County, and

the City of Coralville.2 The Trust deeded 7.63 acres of its Johnson County land to

Coralville just as Tiffin was starting condemnation proceedings to acquire some of

the Trust’s land for the road.

       In this appeal, Tiffin and Coralville are the litigants. Two earlier appeals

before our court dealt with Forevergreen Road, but those cases only involved the

Trust and Tiffin. See generally City of Tiffin v. TAT, LLC, No. 20-0912, 2021 WL

2452060 (Iowa Ct. App. June 16, 2021); Ruth E. Rarick Tr., 2021 WL 2453375.

1 In one of our earlier decisions involving this road, we quoted the district court:
       There are now six cases that have been filed that are related to this
       case, none of which are individually assigned to any judge of the
       Sixth Judicial District: CVCV081144 (a certiorari action brought by
       the Trust, which was dismissed by agreement of the parties on
       January 6, 2020); CVCV081458 (a certiorari action brought by the
       Trust); CVCV081474 (a certiorari action brought by the City of
       Coralville, Iowa); CVCV081479 (a declaratory judgment action
       brought by Tiffin); EQCV081622 (an Iowa Code chapter 6B claim
       brought by the City of Coralville, Iowa); and EQCV081617 (an Iowa
       Code chapter 6A and 6B claim brought by the Trust and Clint Rarick).
Ruth E. Rarick Tr. v. City of Tiffin, No. 20-0955, 2021 WL 2453375, at *2 n.1 (Iowa
Ct. App. June 16, 2021).
2 An individual, Clint Rarick, has a leasehold interest in the Trust’s land. In addition

to the previous cases already listed, there was reference in the pleadings filed in
this matter to a petition filed by the Trust (CVCV082400) and a petition filed by
Rarick (CVCV082399), which also raise claims against Tiffin under Iowa Code
chapters 6A and 6B (2021) and a statement that EQCV081617 was dismissed by
Rarick.
                                          3

Because of strategic moves3 by the Trust, which originally owned the land, and

Coralville, which now owns the land, we were asked to decide if the development

of the road served a public purpose and would be a public improvement under

Iowa Code section 6A.22(2) (2019). City of Tiffin, 2021 WL 2452060, at *3–5. We

said, as it relates to the ability to condemn for a public purpose, the answer is yes.

Id. at *5. And in that same appeal, we agreed with the Trust that the validity of the

quit claim deed between it and Coralville was not properly before the court and

then reversed the district court ruling invalidating the deed. Id. at *6. On the same

day as that appellate decision was filed, we reversed the district court’s dismissal

of the Trust’s petition for writ of certiorari and found that Tiffin had not complied

with the condemnation requirements by providing the Trust with an appraisal and

offer for its possibility for a reverter interest in the land. See Ruth E. Rarick Tr.,

2021 WL 2453375, at *5–7.

       Now, following the district court’s denial of Tiffin’s requested relief in an

action for declaratory judgment against Coralville, Tiffin appeals. In this round,

Tiffin asked the district court to declare Tiffin had the authority to build the road

3 The district court described the relationship between Coralville and the Trust:
               On August 22, 2019, and prior to Tiffin taking additional action
       on their resolution [to condemn], the Trust executed a Quit Claim
       Deed conveying the subject property to Coralville, but with a
       reversion clause. This Quit Claim Deed was recorded on August 23,
       2019. The Quit Claim Deed grants Coralville the subject property
       with the agreement Coralville will not assess any costs to the Trust
       for the construction of the proposed public road. Furthermore, the
       location of the public road must be mutually agreed upon by
       Coralville and the Trust. Finally, in the event Coralville does not
       construct this road within five (5) years the subject property reverts
       back to the Trust.
(Footnote omitted.)
                                          4

and to invalidate the quit claim deed between the Trust and Coralville. The district

court found (1) the Trust was an indispensable party and its exclusion from the

case meant it could not set aside the quit claim deed and (2) because the land was

owned by Coralville, Tiffin could not use eminent domain to take the land. Tiffin

argues the Trust was not an indispensable party to the question of Coralville’s

jurisdiction; the district court should have invalidated the quit claim deed to the

extent it operated to give Coralville authority to build a street; and that Tiffin—not

Coralville—has the jurisdiction, control, and authority to acquire the land. Because

the Trust was not brought in as an indispensable party, and because of concerns

over judicial economy and so that the issues can be fully and finally decided, we

reverse and remand for a determination of one lingering issue impacting our ability

to resolve the issues before us today.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings.

       The Iowa Department of Transportation (DOT) built a new interchange at

Interstate 380 and Forevergreen Road in the City of North Liberty, which included

paving a new portion of Forevergreen Road in North Liberty. Tiffin asked it to also

connect that portion of Forevergreen Road to the portion of the road in Tiffin, but

the DOT declined. Tiffin, claiming that the DOT then told the city it bore the

responsibility of connecting the roads, eventually created the plan seen below, on

which we have identified important landmarks and those communities having

jurisdiction over the properties.
                                         5

                                                              Avenue
                                                              Jasper
    Johnson County                                                            North Liberty

                                         Trust Land

                                                              Old Park Road
     Tiffin                                                                      Coralville

        The portion of the land between New Park Road and Jasper Avenue in

unincorporated Johnson County was owned by the Trust. In total, Tiffin needed

“0.75 acres in fee simple title, 0.21 acres permanent easement, and 0.85 acres

temporary construction easement” from the Trust’s land to be able to finish the

project.

        Coralville had concerns about the early iterations of Tiffin’s plan, and it

believed Johnson County, North Liberty, Tiffin, and Coralville should collaborate to

come up with the best option—Coralville’s city engineer, Scott Larson, sent Tiffin

his recommendations, which Tiffin declined to follow.4

4The suggestion, which was submitted into evidence by Coralville, was described
by Larson as a quick sketch that “took [him] about 20 minutes to put together.” The
image is dated and does not show New Park Road. But it reflected Coralville’s
main concern that the intersection be designed with Forevergreen Road and Old
Park Road/Jasper Avenue converging at a ninety-degree angle.
                                           6

       Tiffin and the Trust were unable to agree to a voluntary acquisition of the

land, so Tiffin began condemnation proceedings under Iowa Code chapter 6A; the

Tiffin City Council passed the resolution authorizing condemnation on August 20,

2019. On August 22, the Trust signed a quit claim deed giving the 250 feet of land

needed for the road to Coralville. The deed stated that if after five years Coralville

had not built the connecting road in a way agreed upon by the Trust and Coralville,

then the land would revert to the Trust. It also stated that Coralville would not

charge the Trust any assessment on the extension. Coralville’s city council passed

a resolution to accept the deed and began paying property taxes for the land. Tiffin

filed a petition for declaratory judgment against Coralville, but not the Trust, calling

the quit claim deed a “sham,” and asked the district court to:

       declare and construe the parties’ relative rights and authority; that
       the [c]ourt declare that the City of Tiffin, Iowa has full and complete
       authority to proceed with and complete its Forevergreen Road
       project, including condemnation of the 250 feet strip of the [Trust]
       land Quit Claim Deeded to the City of Coralville, Iowa; that the City
       of Coralville cannot in any way interfere with nor impede the City of
       Tiffin, Iowa’s Forevergreen Road Project; for such other relief as may
       be appropriate to adjudge and declare the parties’ relative right.

Coralville answered, urging the district court to “either refrain from declaring the

rights of the parties . . . [or] declare that [Tiffin] does not have the power and

authority to acquire the property owned by [Coralville] via the use of eminent

domain.” It also filed a counterclaim (1) stating the land deeded to them was now

public property, which could not be condemned by another municipality and

(2) requesting Tiffin be “permanently enjoined from acquiring the [p]roperty rights”
                                           7

to the 250 feet the Trust deeded to Coralville.5 In a separate filing, Coralville also

petitioned the district court to (1) prohibit the condemnation Tiffin had begun until

Tiffin proved it had the authority to do so and (2) require Tiffin to properly comply

with all of the condemnation procedures, some of which Tiffin had missed, before

they continued. These two proceedings were consolidated.

       Trial was held in January 2022, and both parties filed post-trial briefs in lieu

of closing arguments. The district court ruled that it could not set aside the quit

claim deed because the Trust was an indispensable party not included in the action

and, because Coralville owned the land, it was public property not able to be taken

by eminent domain. It also granted Coralville an injunction preventing Tiffin from

pursuing condemnation of the land through eminent domain.6 Both parties filed

Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.904 motions to expand, which the district court

denied apart from a nunc pro tunc ruling to correct a scrivener’s error. Tiffin now

appeals.

II. Analysis.

       On appeal, Tiffin argues the Trust was not an indispensable party necessary

to invalidate the quit claim deed; the district court should have invalidated the quit

claim deed; and Tiffin has the jurisdiction, control, and authority to acquire the land.

5 There was also a third claim—that the declaratory judgment action was not ripe
for adjudication due to a pending action alleging the taking is not for a public
purpose—which Coralville formally dropped before trial began.
6 The district court did make a caveat—if the land reverted back to the Trust, a new

quit claim deed was issued, or the land was no longer held for public purpose, the
injunction would dissolve. It also noted that the ruling “express[ed] no opinion as
to Tiffin’s authority to condemn the private property interest that the Trust has in
this property under the [quit claim deed], with it potentially reverting back to the
Trust.”
                                             8

But, because we can resolve the issue on whether or not the Trust is an

indispensable party as to the viability of the quit claim deed, we begin there.

       Tiffin asked the district court to set aside the quit claim deed, in part because

it believed the deed to be a “sham”—in Tiffin’s post-trial brief, it alleged the property

was conveyed to Coralville only to “try and stop Tiffin’s public improvement

project.” In its initial ruling, the district court found that “as a factual matter it [was]

very difficult, if not impossible, to void the Quit Claim Deed without hearing from

representatives from the Trust” and that “the Trust has an interest that is clearly

impacted by any decision regarding the Quit Claim Deed. . . . The Court finds it

cannot issue a Declaratory Judgment against the Quit Claim Deed without

impairing the Trust’s rights and interests.”7 The district court explained:

               The Court finds the property could possibly revert back to the
       Trust, pursuant to the terms of the Quit Claim Deed, and that there
       is a private interest the Trust has in this property. . . .
               The Court finds that there is no manner in which the Court
       could invalidate the Quit Claim Deed that does not impair or impact
       the Trusts’ rights and interests. The Trust cannot have the
       conveyance of the property it initiated via the Quit Claim Deed
       invalidated without having an opportunity to defend its conveyance
       via the Quit Claim Deed. The Court finds no manner that it could
       both invalidate the Quit Claim Deed and not impact the [T]rust’s
       interests in this matter. Furthermore, given that there is a pending
       action involving the Trust and this Quit Claim Deed it is better to allow
       this question to be resolved in that litigation, where all parties have
       the opportunity to be heard regarding it. The Court finds the Trust is
       an indispensable party regarding whether to invalidate the Quit Claim
       Deed, and the Court will not entertain setting it aside as a result.

7The district court made the distinction that the Trust was “not an indispensable
party as it pertains solely to Coralville’s interest” in the land.
                                            9

(Emphasis added.) Consequently, the district court declined to address the validity

of the deed and instead determined “the sole issue of Tiffin’s rights in relation to

Coralville’s interests in the [deeded] property.”

                A party is indispensable if the party’s interest is not severable,
         and the party’s absence will prevent the court from rendering any
         judgment between the parties before it; or if notwithstanding the
         party’s absence the party’s interest would necessarily be inequitably
         affected by a judgment rendered between those before the court.

Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.234(2).

         We agree with the district court that the Trust was an indispensable party to

the question of the validity of the quit claim deed and its terms. Likewise, the

various conflicting filings and positions taken throughout the tenure of the case

requires that the interests of the Trust, Tiffin, and Coralville be addressed in one

case. For example, although it no longer has legal effect because our court

reversed the ruling, see City of Tiffin, 2021 WL 2452060, at *6, one of the many

district court judges touching these cases previously determined the deed was

invalid.8 In that case, Coralville’s interests were impacted without its participation

8   That court held:
         [The Tiffin City Administrator]’s affidavit, which is not refuted by any
         affidavit testimony offered by the Trust, establishes that
         Forevergreen Road is an existing city street in Tiffin, and pursuant to
         the above-cited provisions of Iowa Code chapter 306, Tiffin has the
         authority to control, extend, and construct a new portion of
         Forevergreen Road in Tiffin. Further, the [c]ourt concludes the
         undisputed facts, as established by the affidavit of [the
         administrator], show the Quit Claim Deed from the Trust to Coralville
         is invalid because the south 250 feet of the Trust’s property referred
         to in the Quit Claim Deed does not adjoin Coralville. It also is
         undisputed that the [DOT] originally intended to construct
         Forevergreen Road through North Liberty to Jasper Avenue in Tiffin,
         which then was a gravel two-lane road. Changes to the [DOT]’s
         construction plans necessitated that the Tiffin portion of
         Forevergreen Road have to cross a small portion of the
                                         10

and, looking forward, we think it is possible the same thing could happen to the

Trust. At the oral arguments in the current case, Tiffin argued it was not necessary

to decide the validity of the deed as to the Trust because that issue was severable

from the Coralville issues, but Tiffin’s appellate brief references the “sham” deed9

multiple times. And, we note that shortly before the trial date, Tiffin attempted to

consolidate additional matters, including a matter involving the Trust, arguing there

were “common questions of law and fact” making it necessary to determine the

rightful owner of the property.10

       Before we can answer the questions over the road construction, we must

answer the preliminary question of who owns the property. That question requires

input from all the parties to the deed in one proceeding before we can move

forward with the remaining issues.11 Without the Trust involved, as the district

         Trust’s/Coralville’s property. Coralville has no jurisdiction and control
         over this area pursuant to Iowa Code chapter 306.
                 . . . Despite the fact that the Trust deeded the property to
         Coralville, Tiffin retains the authority and jurisdiction to condemn this
         portion of the Trust’s property because the land is not currently
         devoted to a public use through action to be taken by Coralville, and
         Tiffin’s construction of Forevergreen Road in Tiffin is a public
         purpose that supports exercise of eminent domain over the Trust.
9 In its appellate brief, Tiffin defined sham as “one in good form but false in fact.”
10 The Trust, Tiffin, and Coralville all agreed to a consolidation of all matters but

Tiffin refused to move the trial date, so the district court denied the request to
consolidate the Trust issues.
11 In determining whether we could bypass a review of the quit claim deed issue

against the Trust, we considered whether issue preclusion might apply to resolve
any subsequent action against the Trust over the deed validity. But, from the
limited record on the issue, we cannot say that the question is identical, especially
in light of the parties’ initial thoughts that the Trust was a necessary party to that
question. See Emps. Mut. Cas. Co. v. Van Haaften, 815 N.W.2d 17, 22 (Iowa
2012) (“The party invoking issue preclusion must establish four elements: ‘(1) the
issue in the present case must be identical, (2) the issue must have been raised
and litigated in the prior action, (3) the issue must have been material and relevant
to the disposition of the prior case, and (4) the determination of the issue in the
                                          11

court noted, there was no way to determine if the deed was made in good faith;

and, to void the deed would take away the benefits of the contract, such as the

guarantee that the Trust would not be charged an assessment, without allowing

the Trust the opportunity to defend its deed.

       Still, though we agree with the district court the Trust is an indispensable

party, the proper remedy was for the district court to “order the party brought in”

rather than dismiss the claim. Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.234(3); see JAKS Props., LLC v.

St. Croix Hospice, LLC, No. 17-1198, 2018 WL 5846088, at *9 (Iowa Ct. App. Nov.

7, 2018).12 So, we reverse the district court’s ruling and remand the case with

instructions to order that the Trust be brought into the case and to address the

prior action must have been essential to the resulting judgment.’” (citation
omitted)). Likewise, it might be argued that the Trust and Coralville had different
motivations for entering into the deed. Finally, in one of many rulings in the
plethora of cases filed over this road situation, in response to Tiffin’s argument that
our prior opinions established binding precedent as to these facts, one of the
district court judges said
         [w]hile the trial court for these matters may ultimately also determine
         that Tiffin’s Forevergreen Road project is a public use, serves a
         public purpose, and is a public improvement, neither the prior
         opinions of the Johnson County District Court nor unpublished
         opinion of the Iowa Court of Appeals are opinions that constitute
         binding precedent upon this Court.
Thus, for all involved, judicial economy is served by adding the Trust to the current
action and having the last judge who heard the case decide the deed issue so that
it is resolved as to all parties. See City of Johnston v. Christenson, 718 N.W.2d
290, 300 (Iowa 2006) (citing Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 68 (Am. L.
Inst. 1982) (“When an issue of fact or law is actually litigated and determined by a
valid and final judgment, and the determination is essential to the judgment, the
determination is conclusive in a subsequent action between the parties, whether
on the same or a different claim.”)).
12 Tiffin argues Coralville did not raise the Trust as an indispensable party until its

post-trial brief, which was offered in lieu of closing arguments. Insofar as this is an
error-preservation argument, we are unpersuaded because the issue of an
indispensable party can be raised for the first time on appeal. See In re Estate of
Darrah, No. 21-1082, 2022 WL 3906754, at *6 (Iowa Ct. App. Aug. 31, 2022) (citing
Ditch v. Hess, 212 N.W.2d 442, 450 (Iowa 1973)).
                                        12

question of the validity of the deed as to the Trust and how that impacts the rights

of Tiffin to proceed in this action.

       REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.