Seymour v. City of Ames

255 N.W. 874, 218 Iowa 615
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 23, 1934
DocketNo. 41984.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 255 N.W. 874 (Seymour v. City of Ames) 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
Seymour v. City of Ames, 255 N.W. 874, 218 Iowa 615 (iowa 1934).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

The appellees are the owners of an unimproved five-acre tract of land near the western’limits of the city of Ames, Iowa, which tract of land borders upon a highway generally known as Lincoln Highway. All of the property of that portion of the city of Ames is platted or laid out in town lots with the exception of this particular five-acre tract. The highway commission had payed the Lincoln Highway along this tract with, an eighteen-foot strip of pavement, and the city of Ames proposed to and did widen the pavement by adding a six and a half foot strip on each side of the pavement installed by. the state highway commission. The city council on its own motion provided for the permanent improvement along said highway within.the city of Ames. This was initiated by a proposed resolution of necessity, which proposed resolution of necessity is known as “Resolution No. 887”, and was passed by the city council on the 6th day of January, 1930. Pursuant thereto a copy of said proposed resolution was published in the Ames Daily Tribune on the 10th and 17th days of January, 1930, which proposed resolution of necessity by its terms provided that the city council would meet at ■ 8 o’clock on the 3d day of February, 1930, in the city hall, for the purpose’ of considering objections to the proposed resolution of necessity. No objections to the proposed resolution were filed by appellees or any other per *617 son-interested, and the appellees did not appear or make any objections at the time that said resolution came on before the city council. On the evening of the 3d of February, 1930, the proposed resolution, No. 887-A, was passed by four members of the council. The record shows that the city of Ames at that time had six councilmen and a mayor.

About the same time that the city of Ames sought to improve the highway by installation of the pavement, it also sought to install sewer and water connections along the highway, and assessed the cost of same to the adjacent property. The five-acre tract belonging to appellees, which was unimproved, is described as the south half of the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section 5, and said tract was never subdivided into blocks or lots. On the 7th of October, 1929, the city council' of Ames passed a resolution, ordering the property owners to install connections for gas, water, and sewer to the curb line of the property adjacent to the'proposed improvements; that said installation be made within thirty days from the adoption of the resolution “according to the plans and specifications of the City Manager of Engineering now on file in the office of the City Clerk,” and further providing that if such connections were not made, the city engineer should cause the same to be made and the cost and 'expense thereof assessed against the property in front of which the improvements were made. The city clerk was given instructions in said resolution to give notice as far as practicable, to the property owners, and to publish the same in two issues of the Ames Daily Tribune, and by handbills posted along the streets proposed to he improved.

No plat was filed in the office of the city clerk, with the specifications for doing the work, showing where the water and sewer connections should be constructed, until after the work had been completed. Specifications governing contractors were filed with the city clerk on October 21, 1929, but- such specifications did not prescribe the number of connections required or their location.

The appellees resided in the city of Ames, Iowa, at all times involved in these proceedings. They and their residence were known to the city officials, but no notice was ever given to the appellees except by- publication in the newspaper, which was not directed to them personally, and by handbills, posted along the streets, which notice likewise was not addressed to the property owners. The appellees did not have actual notice of the passage of the resolution *618 or of the work that was being done, and did not know that their property was to be assessed for sewer and water connections until after they had been installed.

There were two other special assessments, not involved in this case, one for sanitary sewer, and one for storm sewer. And the total of the assessment of the four improvements against the five-acre tract of unimproved land amounted to $3,645. Twelve connections were constructed for this single parcel of land at the total cost of $661.91, or $55.17 per connection. And the assessment for paving was in the amount of $1,671.46.

The appellees commenced an action against the city of Ames, the city clerk, the treasurer of Story county, and the auditor of Story county, Iowa, to enjoin the enforcement and collection of the pretended special assessment for the pavement of their five-acre tract, and for the sewer and water connections, asking said special assessments be decreed to be null and void and that same be canceled of record. Said action was in two divisions. The first division prayed for relief as to the pavement assessment, and the second division prayed for relief as to the assessment covering the water and sewer connections. The city of Ames answered the petition, alleging that because the appellees did not file objections to the special assessment before the city council, they had waived irregularities in the proceedings, and that, because the appellees knew of the installation of the improvements and had failed to make objections, they are estopped to claim that the proceedings of the city council were void. For answer to the second count, the city of Ames filed a general denial.

■ The case proceeded to trial and the lower- court entered a decree, granting the relief prayed for by the appellees, holding that said assessments were null and void and canceling of record said assessments and enjoining the collection of said assessments by said city of Ames and its officials and the county officials. And from this decree the city of Ames has appealed to this court.

In its argument the city of Ames admits that the resolution of necessity requires a three-fourths vote where the improvement is ordered on motion of the council without petition of the property owners, and it admits, as the proposed resolution was only voted for by four members of the city council, the required three-fourths vole was not secured and the decree of the district court was correct in so far as it applies to count 1 of appellees’ *619 petition, unless the appellees are estopped from setting up these matters at this time.

So the only question that confronts us, as far as Division 1 of the appellees’ petition is concerned, is whether or not the appellees were estopped from claiming that the city council had no jurisdiction. The appellants cite in support of their contention, the case of Gilcrest & Co. v. City of Des Moines, 157 Iowa 525, 137 N. W. 1072. In the cited case we find the following (page 529):

“The individual objectors to the assessments had petitioned the council for the paving of these streets, and thus set the proceeding in motion.

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255 N.W. 874, 218 Iowa 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seymour-v-city-of-ames-iowa-1934.