Dowell v. Talbot Paving Co.

38 N.E. 389, 138 Ind. 675
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1894
DocketNo. 16,770
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 38 N.E. 389 (Dowell v. Talbot Paving Co.) 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
Dowell v. Talbot Paving Co., 38 N.E. 389, 138 Ind. 675 (Ind. 1894).

Opinion

McCabe, J.

Appellee sued appellant, in the Blackford Circuit Court, to foreclose a lien on certain lots owned [676]*676by appellant in the town of Hartford City, in the county of Blackford, for street improvements on Washington street, on which appellant’s lots bordered and abutted.

A trial by the court resulted in a special finding of the facts, on which conclusions of law were stated by the. court. Pursuant to the conclusions of law, the court, over a motion for a new trial, rendered a judgment and decree in favor of appellee for the total amount of the cost of such improvement, $741.11, and $100.00 attorney’s fee, which was distributed proportionately on each of the three lots against which the cost of the improvement had been assessed, according to the amount on each.

The errors assigned call in question the sufficiency of the facts stated in the complaint, the conclusions of law, the action of the court in overruling the appellant’s motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, overruling appellant’s motion for judgment in his favor on the facts found, in making new findings of facts and adding the same to the original facts found by the court, in striking out the original conclusions of law and rendering new ones, in refusing to modify the decree, in refusing a jury trial, and in refusing to add to the special finding of facts the facts requested by the appellant.

It is expressly conceded by the appellant’s learned counsel that the same question is presented on the special finding and conclusions of law that is presented on the assignment that the complaint does not state facts, sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and we may add that of the motion in arrest of judgment. Under such circumstances, it is not material to examine into the sufficiency of the complaint. Haskett v. Maxey, 134 Ind. 182.

The facts essential to a determination of the questions involved in the conclusions of law, as shown by the special finding, are that on and prior to June 4, 1890, Hart[677]*677ford City was, and still is, an incorporated town; that on that day the board of trustees of said town, in regular session, deeming it necessary to improve Washington street, in said town, from the east line of Gadbury’s addition to the tracks of the Pittsburgh and Chicago Railway, therein declared, by resolution, the necessity therefor, providing therein the kind, size, location and terminal points of such improvement; that due notice was given to the property-owners, and after a hearing given to such owners, said board, on July 2,1890, at a regular session, by a vote of more than two-thirds, duly ordered said street to be graded and paved with cedar blocks, and to be curbed with stone curbing, according to the plans and specifications then and there adopted and filed with the clerk of said town; that said work was to be done by contract; that due and proper notice was given by publication for three weeks in a newspaper published within said town for sealed proposals for doing said work; that plaintiff filed its bid in accordance with said notice, it being the lowest and best bid for said work; that said board, at a regular meeting, on August 2d, 1890, let said work to plaintiff; that the resolution ordering the work to be done provided that the costs should be collected from the real estate adjoining and bordering on said improvement, and thereupon plaintiff and said town entered into a written contract for the making of said improvement pursuant to said bid; that plaintiff completed said work, and at a regular meeting of said board it found and determined that said work had been done and completed according to the terms of said contract, and thereupon caused a final estimate of the total cost thereof under said contract to be made by the town engineer in accordance with section 6 of chapter 118 of the Acts of 1889, p. 242; that after the filing of the report of the town engineer as to the cost of said improvement, said board caused two weeks’ notice to the [678]*678property-owners affected to be given by publication in two newspapers representing tlie two political parties casting the largest number of votes at the last general election, printed and published in said town of the time and place when and where a hearing would be had upon such report before a committee appointed by such board to consider such report; that at the time and place mentioned in such notice the committee met and heard all objections by property-owners desiring to offer objections,and all persons aggrieved; that said committee reported back to said board that said report of the town engineer be amended in some slight particulars; that certain pieces of real estate bordering on said improvement had been accidentally omitted from said report that should be placed in said estimate, and that the total cost of said improvement was $29,877.51; that the average cost per running foot of the whole -length of that part of said street so improved was $3,237, and stating in said report the name of each property-owner on that part of the street so improved, and also that the number of front feet owned by the respective property-owners on said part of said street was 8,103.

Also setting out in said report the amount of the cost for said improvement due upon each lot or parcel of ground respectively, giving the full description, together with the owner’s name of each lot or parcel of ground bordering on said street so improved. The defendant was assessed therein the amount hereinafter stated against the property hereinafter mentioned; that said report was true in every particular; that said board, at a regular meeting thereof, held on January 7th, 1891, having found said committee’s report, and the proposed estimate reported by them, to be just, true, and legal, confirmed, approved, and adopted said report, and then and there -assessed against the various lots and parcels of [679]

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.E. 389, 138 Ind. 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dowell-v-talbot-paving-co-ind-1894.