Trepp v. Independent School District

240 N.W. 217, 213 Iowa 944
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 12, 1932
DocketNo. 40731.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 240 N.W. 217 (Trepp v. Independent School District) 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
Trepp v. Independent School District, 240 N.W. 217, 213 Iowa 944 (iowa 1932).

Opinion

*946 Morling, J.

While the actions are against the School District and its officers and directors, we shall, for the purpose of the appeal, consider the district as the real and only defendant. Defendant’s school building having burned, defendant entered into a contract with Arthur H. Neumann & Company for the construction of a new building at the agreed cost of $100,554.00. The district also entered into a contract with Carstens Brothers for the installation of a heating plant and plumbing and wiring in this “new school building at the agreed cost of $23,200.00.”

The actions are triable here only on errors assigned and argued. The trial court’s conclusions on the facts may not be disturbed if there is sufficient evidence to support them.

I. One of plaintiff’s contentions is that the Carstens contract and the indebtedness thereby created were prior in point of time to the Neumann contract and indebtedness; that the Neumann indebtedness was therefore not in existence when the indebtedness on the Carstens contract was created, and cannot be taken into account in determining whether the Carstens contract would result in the creation of an indebtedness in excess of the constitutional limit. The trial court found that the Neumann contract preceded the Carstens Brothers contract, ‘' or at least it must be said that the Carstens Brothers contract did not precede the Neumann contract.” Both contracts are dated March 31, 1921. The minute book of the board of directors of the school district under date of March 31, 1921, records that a motion to let the Neumann contract was made, seconded, and carried. Immediately following is the record of a motion also seconded and carried, to let the heating, plumbing, and wiring contract to Carstens Brothers for $23,200. This motion included the provision: ‘ ‘ This contract not to be binding until the bonds are sold and approved.” The motion to let the Neumann contract provided: “It is further understood that the contractor is not to commence operations until bonds arc sold and approved; that satisfactory surety bonds be given by the contractor by a reliable insurance company satisfactory to the board.” At that time Chapter 347, Laws"38th G. A. (amended by Chapters 28 and 147, 39th G. A.) required public boards, in entering into any contract for a public building at a contract price in excess of $1,000, to require, as a condition precedent to *947 the making of such contract, that the contractor furnish and file bond as therein specified. The act provided:

“No public contract coming within the provisions of this chapter shall be of any validity until the bond mentioned herein has been executed and filed in the form and bearing the conditions as provided by this chapter, and until there is endorsed on said contract the written endorsement of the clerk of the district court * # that such a bond, properly executed, is now on file in his office. ’ ’ Section 3.

At this point appellant’s contention is that the Carstens bond was filed and approved April 13, 1921, and the Neumann bond filed April 20, 1921, and that under the statute the Carstens contract, and therefore the indebtedness under it, was in existence prior to the indebtedness on the Neumann contract. The question of fact thus presented is not triable here de novo. It will be noticed that the statute provides that not only the filing of'the bond but the clerk’s endorsement upon the contract is a prerequisite to-the validity of the contract.

At the trial it was stipulated:

“That bonds for the faithful performance of both of said contracts * * s were filed by the Neumann Company and by Carstens on the 12th day of April, 1921. ’ ’

Later, the clerk of the district court was called by plaintiff, and testified that he had in his office the bonds. Plaintiff thereupon offered them in evidence over objection, not ruled on, and asked “permission of the court to change the stipulation as heretofore made on the dates of the contractors’ bonds.” 1 It was thereupon agreed, “in so far as the stipulation with reference to the filing of the bonds is modified by anything in these instruments, it may be withdrawn,” but should “stand otherwise.” The Carstens bond is dated April 12, 1921, and the Neumann bond April 19, 1921. Neither contract as set out by appellants in their abstract bears any endorsement of the clerk of the filing of the bond. Appellants by amendment to their abstract apparently intend to state that endorsed upon the Carstens contract is a clerk’s certificate, dated April 13, 1921, of' filing of bond. The amendment states that there is no endorsement by the clerk-on the Neumann contract; that the clerk’s certificate *948 dated April 20, 1921, is endorsed upon the bond (not the contract). The appellees, however, deny the correctness of this amendment, and expressly deny that the alleged certificates of the clerk were introduced in evidence and the correctness of the statements that there is no endorsement on the Neumann contract. Appellees set out a stipulation that the Carstens contract was executed March 31, 1931. The exhibits have not been certified to this Court. Plaintiffs stand here on allegations of their petition that the Carstens contract was entered into ‘ ‘ on or about the 31st day of March, 1921.” The contract is set out, and is dated March 31, 1921. The contractor was required to provide all material and perform all work for the heating, plumbing, and electric wiring ' ‘ of the new school building located at Pocahontas, Iowa, for the Independent School District of Pocahontas, Iowa.” By the terms of the Carstens contract there is made a part of it "Drawings, specifications, proposal, general conditions of contract, the specifications and plans as provided for in the specifications and plans for the general contract.” The Carstens contract requires that "the various portions of said work shall be completed so as not to interfere with the work under the other contracts on said building, the entire contract to be thus fully completed not later than October 1st, 1921.” Plaintiffs in their reply allege that defendant represented to Carstens Brothers that a tax as provided by the act later referred to created a fund of approximately $40,000, "which fund would be available to be used in payment of a part of the contract price of the contract Exhibit A. (Carstens Brothers) and a certain other contract entered into about the same time” with A. H. Neumann & Company. The reply further states:

"That at the time of the creation of the obligations as set out in plaintiff’s Exhibit A there was also created a certain other obligation under and by virtue of a contract entered into between A. H. Neumann & Co. and the Independent School District .of Pocahontas. ’ ’

Appellants’ pleadings, therefore, are that the indebtedness on the main contract and that' on the Carstens contract were simultaneously created. On this record the finding of the District Court can not be set aside as not sufficiently supported. Therefore, in computing the amount to which the District would, *949 as a result of the Carstens contract, become indebted, the indebtedness on the Neumann contract, $100,554.00, must be included.

II.

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240 N.W. 217, 213 Iowa 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trepp-v-independent-school-district-iowa-1932.