Van Meter v. City of Tipton

178 Iowa 1201
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 19, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 178 Iowa 1201 (Van Meter v. City of Tipton) 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
Van Meter v. City of Tipton, 178 Iowa 1201 (iowa 1916).

Opinion

Salinger, J.

to^tionsI^pubments^assessment ¡appeal. According to a petition in equity filed by appellees, each of them prepared and'submitted a bond for costs, to which' the affidavit of the surety recited that the surety was a resident of the state, was worth $200 beyond the amount of his debts, and had property in the state liable to execution equal to the sum of $100. It appears by.the am-[1202]*1202davit of the city clerk that, on the 26th day of February,-1914, each of the appellees appeared at his officé and presented said bond for filing; that he then informed plaintiff that the bond tendered was not in sufficient amount; that the sureties were not sufficient; and that he would not and could not approve the same until sufficient sureties were obtained, in a larger sum than the one named in the proposed bond. And he also informed them that they had until the night of February 28th to file a proper bond, if they wished to appeal. Tie says no other or different bond or sureties were furnished or offered, and no bond was filed by them or approved by him. There seems to be no dispute as to these matters. The sole avoidance of the appellees is the assertion that the clerk acted arbitrarily and fraudulently, and that, at worst, there is here nothing but a defective bond. We are constrained to hold otherwise. We are committed to the rule that no appeal lies from such assessments except as provided by statute, and that such statute must be strictly complied with; that, to effect an appeal, there must, among other things, be filed a bond for costs, to be fixed and approved by either city clerk or mayor (City of Fairfield v. Jefferson County, 168 Iowa 623); and that the requirement to file cost bond, to be fixed and approved by either mayor or clerk within 10 days, is mandatory, and the appeal is not perfected without the filing of the bond within the required time. Johannsen v. City of Colfax, 161 Iowa 502. These cases seem to us to rule this.

We have no occasion to pass upon what the effect would be had there been fraudulent or arbitrary conduct on part of the clerk, and no opportunity to get an approval by the mayor. Nothing appears to indicate that the mayor could not have been applied to, and, moreover, there were two days wherein to follow the suggestions made by the clerk before time for perfecting appeal had lapsed.

The court below should have sustained the motion to dismiss these appeals. In view of this disposition of the cases, [1203]*1203it becomes immaterial whether the ruling on a motion to strike, which motion was interposed subject to the motion to dismiss appeal, was right. — Reversed.

Gaynor, C. J., Ladd and Evans, JJ., concur.

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Related

Harrington v. Town of Salix
85 N.W.2d 527 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1957)
Woodard v. City of Iowa City
232 N.W. 806 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1930)
Dickinson v. City of Des Moines
211 N.W. 417 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1926)
St. Mary's Church v. City of Pella
197 Iowa 205 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1924)
McCord v. City of Cherokee
180 Iowa 448 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
178 Iowa 1201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-meter-v-city-of-tipton-iowa-1916.