Putman v. Murden

184 N.E. 796, 97 Ind. App. 313, 1933 Ind. App. LEXIS 72
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 14, 1933
DocketNo. 14,525.
StatusPublished

This text of 184 N.E. 796 (Putman v. Murden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Putman v. Murden, 184 N.E. 796, 97 Ind. App. 313, 1933 Ind. App. LEXIS 72 (Ind. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Dudine, J.

— The Indiana State Highway Commission gave notice to road contractors that on the sixteenth day of June, 1931, it would receive bids for the construction of State Road No. 9 from Huntington to Columbia City. The notice stated, “Bids will be received for three types of pavement — Puddled Macadam Surface, Bituminous Retread Surface, Bituminous Coated Aggregate Surface.”

On the morning of that date, Robert E. O’Conner *315 filed suit in the Marion circuit court against the director and members of the state highway commission, seeking to enjoin them from receiving bids and from entering into contract for the construction of said state highway or any other state highway on the theory that the commission had failed to give notice that bids would be received for the construction of three “distinct types of highway” as is required by section 8284, Burns 1926.

The commission, however, received bids for the construction of said state highway on the date fixed in said notice, and on the twenty-fifth day of June, 1931, entered into contract with appellant Putman for the construction thereof, all on said notice.

On June 30, 1931, said Robert E. O’Conner filed a supplemental complaint on the same theory, joining appellant, Putman as a co-defendant. This supplemental complaint alleged that since the filing of the original complaint, the state highway commission had entered into said contract, and it prayed that the director of the state highway commission be enjoined from issuing any orders to appellant, Putman, for the payment of money out of the funds of the state highway commission for work done under said contract.

Defendants below filed separate answers in general denial to the complaints. The cause was submitted to the court for trial without the intervention of a jury. The court found for the plaintiff and enj oined the director and members of the state highway commission from issuing any orders for the payment of money out of the funds of said commission for work done under said contract, and further enjoined them from awarding any contracts for the construction of state highways or parts thereof, without first giving notice as required by law, and further enjoined them from awarding any contracts for the construction of state highways where *316 the notice to bidders only states that bids will be received upon the bituminous type of highway.

■ Appellant, Putman, filed a motion to modify the judgment by striking out of the decree all orders which rendered said contract ineffective, which motion was overruled.

' Appellant also filed a motion for new trial which was overruled.

The errors relied upon in this appeal are: (1) that the court erred in overruling said motion to modify the judgment; (2) that the court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for new trial.

Appellant contends that since the contract was with the state of Indiana, and since the state of Indiana was not made a party, the court did not have jurisdiction over the parties to the contract.

The complaint clearly • disclosed that it was a complaint against the director and members of the Indiana State Highway Commission as such director and members. Law required every contract for state highway work, which the highway commission was authorized to enter into, to be made in the name of the state of Indiana. Sec. 8287, Burns R. S. 1926.

If it was necessary that the state of Indiana be made a party, the defect of parties was clearly apparent on the face of the complaint. This question could have been determined by a demurrer to the complaint. Appellant having failed to file a demurrer to the complaint, and having failed to present the question in an answer to the complaint, the question is deemed to have been waived by him, Sec. 366, Burns 1926, §115, .Baldwin’s Ind. Ann. Stat. 1934, and appellant cannot present the question, for the first time, on appeal. Thomas v. Wood (1878), 61 Ind. 132; Faylor v. Fehler (1913), 181 Ind. 441, 104 N. E. 22.

*317 *316 ¿"■Appellant contends the court should have sustained *317 .his motion to modify the judgment because in this case the court, among other things, decreed that the defendant Indiana State Highway Commission, its director and members be enjoined, “from awarding or signing or executing any contracts for the construction of any state highway or part thereof where the notice to bidders only states that bids will be received upon the bituminous type of highway,” and within a few days thereafter, in another cause, the same court and judge, ordered the Indiana state highway commission to pay estimates, then due, on a similar contract, let on a similar notice. Appellant contends the later decree of the court “in itself constituted a modification of the general injunction provided for in this action and was an entire reversal of the decision of the court rendered in this case. . . .”

We do not agree with appellant on this proposition. If it be assumed that the lower court did decide a case one way, and later, in an entirely different case, which, however, involved the same legal propositions, decided another way, the decision in the later case would not affect the decision in the former case. We consider this so fundamental, that a citation of authorities is unnecessary.

Fairness to the trial court urges however that we say in this opinion that no record was presented to this court showing that the other case referred to by appellant was similar to the instant case.

Appellant set forth, in his motion to modify the judgment, as a ground therefor, the following language: “The findings of the court, as set forth in its written opinion, a copy of which is made a part of this motion, . . . expressly shows that the preponderance of the testimony was in favor of the defendant.” The instrument referred to by appellant as.“written opinion” purports to be a memo. *318 randum of the trial court in which the trial court discussed the evidence in the case and the law applicable thereto, and indicated how it was going to decide the case. The purported memorandum seems to have been prepared by the trial court to assist counsel in drafting the entry which would show the court’s finding and judgment. The concluding sentence of the purported memorandum was a follows, “Counsel will please prepare an entry accordingly.”

The finding of the court as shown by the record in this appeal did not include the contents of said purported memorandum or any part thereof. The incorporation of it in said motion did not, and could not make it the finding of the court. Hence appellant’s contention, which was based on the assumption that the purported memorandum was the court’s finding, must fail.

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Related

Haven v. Snyder
176 N.E. 149 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1931)
Smith, Trustee v. State, Ex Rel.
172 N.E. 911 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1930)
Thomas v. Wood
61 Ind. 132 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1878)
Meyer v. Town of Boonville
70 N.E. 146 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1904)
Faylor v. Fehler
104 N.E. 22 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1914)
Bettenbrock v. Miller
112 N.E. 771 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1916)
Spurrier v. Vater
113 N.E. 732 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
184 N.E. 796, 97 Ind. App. 313, 1933 Ind. App. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/putman-v-murden-indctapp-1933.