Husson v. City of Oskaloosa

37 N.W.2d 310, 240 Iowa 681, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 368
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 3, 1949
DocketNo. 47420.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 37 N.W.2d 310 (Husson v. City of Oskaloosa) 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
Husson v. City of Oskaloosa, 37 N.W.2d 310, 240 Iowa 681, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 368 (iowa 1949).

Opinion

Wennerstrum, J.

— The three plaintiffs herein are owners of property in Oskaloosa, Iowa, which properties are subject to assessment by virtue of a soil-cement-paving project. They seek to enjoin the defendant City and the defendant construction company from proceeding further with the proposed improvement. They also ask that an order be issued expunging the liens filed by the city against the real estate charged witli the cost of the contemplated improvements. The petition further seeks an injunction to prohibit the officials of the city from letting contracts in connection with other street improvements proposed to be made. They will be commented upon later. The plaintiffs contend that the defendant City has acted illegally, inequitably and in a discriminatory and oppressing manner to their injury in connection with the several contemplated improvements. The trial court found for the defendants and held that there was no ground or basis for injunctive relief. The plaintiffs have appealed.

The appellees are the City of Oskaloosa, the Mayor and City Council of that municipality, and the Gee Construction' Company which had contracted with the city to construct the soil-cement work. It appears that the city officials at the time the issues herein developed had given or were giving consideration to a general survey of the needs for surfacing and improving certain streets. At the time of the preliminary consideration of the proposed improvements a general meeting was held at the city hall for the consideration and discussion of the entire program. This was in May 1947. At this meeting comments were made by various interested parties including objectors. Later study was made of the streets proposed to be included in the various projects and the several types of contemplated construction. It appeal's that the City Council, after a study of the entire proposed program, determined that there should be four different 'types of improvements affecting different streets. One was to be a soil-cenient-paving project, the second was to be of a re *684 'inforced' concrete-paving nature, the third was the construction of a curb and gutter on certain streets with a rock-street base and the fourth involved the widening of certain streets, the putting in of new curbs and gutters and necessary additional pavement. There is no issue-raised in the present case concerning . the last two projects and they are in no way involved in this litigation except as the appellants have sought to include them in their general plea for equitable relief.

The entire cost of the soil-cement-paving project was to be assessed against the adjacent property owners and was to be made .a lien upon the affected property. The reinforced concrete-paving program was to be paid through assessment, to the extent that the law permits, but it developed that approximately one half was to be paid by the city and other half by the benefited property owners who are subject to assessment. The curb and gutter project provided for the installation of curb and gutters on certain streets with a rock surfacing of the streets involved. The curb and gutter cost was to be paid by assessment, but the city was to assume the expense of the rock surfacing of the street.

The soil-cement project was instituted by the offering of a resolution of necessity at a meeting of the City Council on July 25, 1947. Plats, schedules, plans, and specifications for this particular work were prepared and a hearing on this matter was set for August 15, 1947. Notice of the hearing was published on July 29 and 30, 1947. At the August 15 hearing written, as well as oral, objections were presented. Following this hearing the council gave consideration to the objections made, considered the percentage of property owners subject to assessment and thereafter an amended resolution of necessity for soil-cement paving was passed. It is contended that no street which had fifty per cent of the property owners subject to assessment as objectors was included in this improvement program. This project was thereafter ordered to be constructed at a meeting of the City Council on August 18, 1947 and the consideration of proposed contracts was set for September 5,1947 and notice to bidders was thereafter published. A few days prior to September 5, 1947 the appellant herein, Elmer Johnson, along with W. F. Rhine-hart and Bertha F. Life, who are not parties to this action, caused *685 a writ of certiorari to be issued to the defendant City by virtue of a petition which alleged that the city had acted illegally and had exceeded its jurisdiction in adopting the soil cement resolution of necessity. The proposed contract letting set for the latter date was not held. Upon the submission of this writ of certiorari to the district court it was annulled and thereafter an appeal was taken to this court by the affected parties. The appeal was not perfected and consequently was dismissed on March 8, 1948. Following this date the City Council readvertised for .bids and the appellee Gee Construction Company presented a bid which resulted in a contract entered into on April 6, 3948.

Relative to the reinforced concrete-paving program the record discloses that a final and definite plan for this type of construction for certain designated streets was not completed until January 1948. On February 18, 1948 the resolution' of necessity with plans, specifications, plats, and schedules were presented to the City Council and notice was thereafter given of a hearing to be held on March 12, 1948. At this hearing the resolution of necessity was adopted without any objections on the part of property owners who would be subject to an assessment. Thereafter a notice under Code section 23.2 was given indicating a part of the cost of the improvement would be borne by the city. A notice ivas thereafter published to bidders and one bid was received but hot accepted because it was deemed that it was too high.

The appellants present numerous grounds for reversal but in their brief they summarize the issues on this appeal as follows: (1) Did the appellee City fail to comply with the law in connection with the projects involved? (2) Ts the contract with the Gee Construction Company legal? There is a third issue presented in this appeal to the effect that the contract of Harry E. Cook, the consulting' engineer, who has a contract contingent upon the amount of money expended, is against public policy. It is maintained that this last question was not raised by the pleadings, was not considered by the trial court and is not subject to consideration by this court.

The appellants herein, through their petition, presented to the trial court issues which related not only to the soil-concrete *686 project which affects their property but also the reinforced concrete program which pertained to streets on which their property was not located. It appears to lie their complaint that they, as general taxpayers, will be affected by the necessity of the city paying any excess costs for this later type of paving over and above that which may be legally assessed against the properties affected. It was their further complaint that proper and sufficient notices were not given which would advise the appellants as general taxpayers of the necessity on the part of the city to provide for the excess cost of this paving by the issuance of bonds.

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.W.2d 310, 240 Iowa 681, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/husson-v-city-of-oskaloosa-iowa-1949.