Lenehan v. Drainage District No. 71

258 N.W. 91, 219 Iowa 294
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 11, 1934
DocketNo. 42581.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 258 N.W. 91 (Lenehan v. Drainage District No. 71) 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
Lenehan v. Drainage District No. 71, 258 N.W. 91, 219 Iowa 294 (iowa 1934).

Opinion

Kjndig, J.

Some time before July 23, 1919, drainage district No. 71 was duly organized in Sac county, according to law. On that date the board of supervisors, acting for and in behalf of the drainage district, awarded to Hueter Brothers, a copartnership, a contract for the construction of sections 2, 3, and 4 of a ditch. Hueter Brothers, on an immaterial date thereafter, sublet a part of the contract to Peter Thorup. These contractors later fully performed the contract, and constructed the ditch. For the performance of the contract, there was due Hueter Brothers and Peter Thorup the sum of approximately $27,076.42. The auditor of Sac county duly delivered to Hueter Brothers and Peter Thorup a number of drainage warrants, drawn on drainage district No. 71, for the purpose of evidenc *296 ing the indebtedness. A certain number of the warrants were assigned respectively to the various plaintiffs-appellants.

According to the appellants’ petition, the supervisors, on February 9, 1922, levied “an assessment upon all the lands (included in) Drainage District Number 71 * * * for the purpose of paying the warrants of these (appellants) and other indebtedness incurred by said district. * * * That the total amount levied by said board of supervisors was the sum of $138,428.95.” “That $42,034.96 was paid into saidi special fund by the property owners, leaving a balance of unpaid assessments in the sum of $96,393.99.” “That the said Board of Supervisors did by resolution provide for the sale of bonds. That bonds were sold for the purpose of paying $78,570.99 of the indebtedness representing assessments not in litigation or under $20.00.” “And that outstanding warrants for the sum of $78,570.99 were paid from funds received from the sale of said bonds, and that the balance of the warrants issued and outstanding were to be paid from assessments levied against the property as the assessments were paid by the property owners over a period of ten years as provided by law.” “That the said Board of Supervisors acting for and in behalf of said Drainage District did in the aforesaid manner levy assessments for the payment of all warrants over a period of ten years which had been issued, including the warrants of these (appellants).” So, included within the warrants not paid by the sale of said bonds, or otherwise, and therefore to be paid out of the alleged ten-year, assessments, are those now held by the appellants.

The appellants, according to the further allegations of their petition, allege that on April 19, 1929, the drainage assessments became insufficient to pay the warrants above named. So a demand was made by the appellants on the board of supervisors of Sac county asking that they levy an additional assessment to make up the deficit. This the board refused to do, and the appellants, on April 30, 1930, commenced the present action for a writ of mandamus to compel the board of supervisors of Sac county and other officers thereof, the defendants-appellees, to levy an additional assessment in a sufficient amount to satisfy the unpaid warrants. During the pendency of that action, the interveners-appellees, who are landowners in said drainage district, intervened for the purpose of resisting the writ of mandamus asked by the appellants.

*297 An answer was filed to the appellants’ petition by the appellees on October 31, 1932. Many defenses, in addition to a general denial, are set forth in the answer, hut only one of them is material here. It relates to the statute of limitations barring an action in mandamus. At this point the appellees in their answer pleaded that the appellants’ action in mandamus is barred by subdivision 4 of section 11007 of the 1931 Code. In that section the limitation fixed is three years.

A motion to dismiss the appellees’ amended and substituted answer was filed by the appellants on the theory that the answer did not state facts sufficient to show the running of the aforesaid statute of limitations. Such limited phase of the controversy was submitted to the district court, and that tribunal overruled the motion on the theory that the statute of limitations had run. Thereupon the appellants elected to stand upon their motion to dismiss and suffer judgment to be entered against them. Therefore judgment was entered against the appellants. From that judgment the appellants appeal.

I. An argument is made by the appellants that the appellees waived the statute of limitations and are estopped from asserting the same. But the allegations in the appellants’ petition concerning the waiver and estoppel are controverted by the appellees in' their answer. So a disputed issue was therefore raised which cannot be determined on the motion to dismiss. American Surety Co. v. Leach, 206 Iowa 1355, loc. cit. 1357, 220 N. W. 34. See Ritter v. Schultz, 211 Iowa 106, 232 N. W. 830. The motion to dismiss was an attack upon the answer and not. upon the petition.

II. In the appellees’ answer, it is averred that on the 7th day of December, 1925, certain land in the drainage district, belonging to Floyd Domino, was sold at tax sale for the nonpayment of the assessment, that the owner of the land never redeemed the same, that the purchaser at the tax sale finally obtained a deed to the land, and that the sale price of the land was not equal to, but greatly below, the original assessment. Consequently the appellees allege that in all events a deficiency in the original assessment occurred at that time, and that, notwithstanding such deficiency,, the appellants failed to exercise the right of demanding the additional assessment, and neglected, for a period of more than three years before the present suit was commenced, to follow such demand with the necessary action in mandamus. Because of that failure, the appel *298 lees declare that the action in mandamus is barred by the aforesaid statute of limitations. Perley v. Heath, 201 Iowa 1163, 208 N. W. 721.

It is first argued by the appellants that the statute of limitations did not run because it was the duty of the drainage district to provide a fund from which to pay the warrants, and that, such fund no.t having been supplied, the statute of limitations would not run; that is to say, the appellants argue that the statute of limitations does not commence to run until the officers in charge have raised a fund from which to satisfy the warrants, and then have refused to pay over such proceeds to the holders of the warrants. See Stockholders Investment Co. v. Town of Brooklyn, 216 Iowa 693, 246 N. W. 826, and cases therein cited.

Obviously, the appellants in the case at bar have overlooked the applicability of the rule of law discussed in the Stockholders Investment Company case and cases therein cited. According to the Stockholders Investment Company case, supra, the rule of law contended for by the appellants in the case at bar does not apply under the facts of this record. While discussing an analogous proposition, we said in Bodman v. Johnson County, 115 Iowa 296, reading on pages 297 and 298, 88 N. W. 331, 332:

■ “It was decided in the case of Mills County Nat. Bank v. Mills County, 67 Iowa 697, 25 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
258 N.W. 91, 219 Iowa 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lenehan-v-drainage-district-no-71-iowa-1934.