Blain v. City of Delphi

145 N.E. 764, 195 Ind. 463, 1924 Ind. LEXIS 159
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1924
DocketNo. 24,845.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 145 N.E. 764 (Blain v. City of Delphi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blain v. City of Delphi, 145 N.E. 764, 195 Ind. 463, 1924 Ind. LEXIS 159 (Ind. 1924).

Opinion

Ewbank, J.

This was an action by appellant, as receiver of an insolvent firm of contractors, to recover from the city of Delphi compensation for grading and graveling certain streets, and building sidewalks, curbs and retaining walls on either side as an incident of improving them, pursuant to a declaratory resolution and other proceedings under the statute which authorizes street improvements to be made at the expense of abutting lot owners, and also to recover for building a bridge and abutments by which one of the streets improved was carried across a deep cut made in improving another of them, and the installation of certain facilities for draining the excavation, and especially that part of it beneath the bridge at the street intersection. The trial court decided that plaintiff (appellant) was not entitled to recover for excavating, grading and graveling the streets, nor for building the sidewalks, curbs and retaining walls, but that he might recover for building the bridge and abutments, and for furnishing and installing the sewer pipe, catch basins, and other drainage facilities, in the total sum of $3,656, for which judgment was rendered in his favor. Insisting that he was also entitled to be paid for the other work done in excavating and improving the streets, plaintiff perfected an appeal, and defendant assigned cross-errors, dis- *466 puting plaintiff’s right to recover anything at all. Nearly 300 pages of the briefs of counsel are devoted to setting out the pleadings, but it is doubtful whether any questions arising thereon are sufficiently stated and supported to call for decision. However, as the principal questions of law which arise upon the motion for a new trial and upon the exceptions to the conclusions of law are the same that the parties seek to present by a discussion of the pleadings, we shall at once proceed to consider them.

It is enough to say that the complaint alleged the adoption of a declaratory resolution for the improvement of the streets in question, the taking of necessary steps to authorize the making of such improvement at the expense of abutting property, the letting of a contract to plaintiff for the construction of said improvements, that plaintiff built them, so far as defendant would permit, and defendant approved and accepted the work as completed; but that defendant had reduced the length of the improvements to be made, some hundreds of feet at each end, and had so changed the work to be done as thereby to render it impossible for plaintiff fully to perform according to his contract, and afterward had made an order that the acceptance of the work be rescinded and set aside, and had refused to levy assessments on the abutting property for the cost. And that the contract alleged to have been entered into by plaintiff and the defendant provided that plaintiff should construct a bridge and abutments at a street intersection, carrying one of said streets over the other above grade, and certain sewers and catch basins to drain the same, as well as excavating, grading and graveling the streets, building sidewalks, etc.; that plaintiff had completed, in compliance with the contract, all of said work which defendant permitted him to construct, and defendant *467 had approved and accepted the same, but afterward had made an order that such acceptance be set aside and rescinded; and further alleged that the agreed price was due and unpaid. By its assignment of cross-errors, appellee attacks the overruling of a demurrer which challenged the sufficiency of the facts stated in this complaint to constitute a cause of action. The city had power to contract for improvements at the intersection of two streets which were so graded that the roadways crossed at different surface levels, by building a bridge to carry one street over the other, and providing drainage made necessary by such grading, and had power to pay for the same out of the public treasury. §§8697, 8960, 8961, 8711 Burns 1914, §§94, 266, 267, Acts 1905 p. 219, §2, Acts 1909 p. 412. And if the city, after letting a contract for grading and graveling the street, constructing curbs and sidewalks and building retaining walls necessary to keep the banks from sliding down into an excavation made in grading it, and after the contractor, at large expense, had completed part of the work according to the contract, should, wrongfully and without the contractor’s consent, do acts by which it was made impossible for him to complete the work so as to perfect his right to enforce assessments against abutting property, it would incur a liability to him for the amount he had earned which was thus made uncollectable. City of LaPorte v. Ahlborn (1922), 191 Ind. 485, 133 N. E. 874, 875, and authorities cited; City of Dunkirk v. Wallace (1898), 19 Ind. App. 298, 304, 49 N. E. 463; City of Newcastle v. Dingle (1916), 185 Ind. 626, 634, 114 N. E. 221.

No error was committed in overruling the demurrer to the complaint.

*468 *467 The defendant city (appellee) filed an answer, several paragraphs of which each alleged, in substance, that plaintiff’s decedent did not construct the improve *468 ments contracted for according to the contract

and specifications, but that, in building them, he fraudulently used an insufficient quantity of cement in proportion to the other ingredients in making the concrete, that the cement used was of inferior quality, and that the gravel used was poor in quality and full of dirt, by reason of which, the improvements as constructed did not comply with the contract and were worthless; and that he procured its acceptance by fraud in covering up and concealing the worthless character of the work as so constructed, and by making a false affidavit on which the city council relied in accepting it. If true, these facts constituted a cause of defense to plaintiff’s action. An acceptance procured by fraud is not conclusive, but may be adjudged by a court of equity not to have been binding on the party defrauded. Town of Woodruff Place v. Gorman (1912), 179 Ind. 1, 6,100 N. E. 296.

Upon learning of the fraud, the city council had a right to repudiate its order accepting the work and present to a court of equity the question whether or not such acceptance was void because procured by fraud. State, ex rel., v. City of Indianapolis (1919), 188 Ind. 685, 692, 123 N. E. 405. A mere order of the common council, afterward made, that the resolution of acceptance be reconsidered and rescinded, and that the common council thereby refused to accept the work until it should be fully completed, would not operate, in itself, to nullify the previous acceptance, since the common council of a city, like other inferior tribunals, has no implied equity powers. Town of Woodruff Place v. Gorman, supra; Hull v. Board (Ind.) 143 N. E. 589, 593.

The holding in State, ex rel., v. City of Indianapolis, supra, does not conflict with the rule of law as stated above, and so far (if at all) as any language in the *469

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Bluebook (online)
145 N.E. 764, 195 Ind. 463, 1924 Ind. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blain-v-city-of-delphi-ind-1924.