Western Asphalt Paving Corp. v. City of Marshalltown

214 N.W. 687, 203 Iowa 1324
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 19, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 214 N.W. 687 (Western Asphalt Paving Corp. v. City of Marshalltown) 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
Western Asphalt Paving Corp. v. City of Marshalltown, 214 N.W. 687, 203 Iowa 1324 (iowa 1926).

Opinions

Vermilion, J.

The plaintiff is the assignee of certain paving certificates issued by the city of Marshalltown in 1918 to the Western Construction Company, a paving contractor, for the payment of a portion of the cost of a street improvement constructed under contract with the city.

*1326 The defendants, other than the city and the county treasurer, are owners of property against which assessments were levied, who appeared before the city council and filed objections to the assessments. The objections were overruled by the council, the assessments were confirmed, and the certificates issued. Such property owners purported to appeal in due time to the district court from the action of the city council. The city appeared in the district court, where the appeals were consolidated for the purpose of trial, and upon a trial, the property owners prevailed. There were decrees sustaining the objections, finding that the paving contract had not been substantially performed, and canceling the certificates.

By this proceeding the plaintiff challenges the validity of the decrees, for want of jurisdiction in the court to entertain the appeals and enter the decrees. This attack is upon two grounds: (1) That the property owners waived their right to file objections before the city council, in that the objections were not filed within the 20-day period provided by Section 823, Code of 1897, and that the city council had no jurisdiction to hear objections filed after the expiration of that period; (2) that the property owners failed to perfect valid appeals to the district court, in that the notices of appeal, though served upon the mayor, as required by statute, were addressed only to the ‘ ‘ city of Marshall-town,” and that the district court, therefore, acquired no jurisdiction to pass upon the appeals.

I. Section 823, Code of 1897, required the city council to give at least 10 days’ notice, by publication and posting, that, within 20 days after the first publication, all objections to the assessments must be made in writing and filed ° with the clerk. The council caused to be pub-_ . ., . lished ana posted a notice that notified property owners to file their objections on or before January 6, 1918. The first publication was on December 13, 1917. The notice published departed from the letter of the statute, in that the date therein fixed as that on or prior to which objections must be filed, was more than 20 days after the first publication. The objections were filed on January 5th, before the date fixed in the notice, but after the expiration of 20 days from the first publication. The action of the property owners was strictly responsive to the notice, according to its terms. It cannot be *1327 said that, notwithstanding the terms of the notice, property owners must have filed their objections within 20 days after the 'first publication, or be held to have waived objections to the assessment; that the council could publish a deceptive notice, and thereby mislead the property owners, and induce them to delay filing their objections until after the lapse of the statutory period, and yet assert the validity of the notice and a waiver of objections by property owners whom the notice' deceived.

Again, if the council had no jurisdiction, as contended by appellant, it was because there was ño notice. Unless the notice given was valid, there was no notice. But if no notice was given, there was no waiver of objections by the property owners; for they were not required to file their objections or suffer the consequences of a waiver until the notice was given, and without notice, they were not required to file them within any given time.. If the council had no jurisdiction, it had no power to approve the assessments or issue the certificates. It is apparent that the variance between the requirement of the statute and the terms of the notice cannot avail the appellant. No prejudice resulted; and, in any event, only the property owners could complain of the invalidity of the notice.

II. Special reliance is put upon the contention that the notice of appeal to the district court was insufficient iñ form to confer jurisdiction on the court. Each property owner purported to appeal from the assessment ordered by the council. Notice of each appeal was served ™ due time; service being accepted by the mayor of ffrg cjty jn ¿¡^g f0rm. The notice was addressed to the city of Marshalltown. The complaint is that it was not addressed to the mayor; and appellant relies upon In re Paving Assessments, 193 Iowa 1234; and Farmers’ St. Sav. Bank, v. Town Council, 199 Iowa 1275. The rule laid down in these eases was that a notice not addressed to any' person was not sufficient to confer jurisdiction.

In Lundy v. City of Ames, 201 Iowa 186, we considered the applicability of the rule of these cases to a notice addressed to the “city of Ames,” the adverse party, service of which was accepted by the mayor, and reviewed our prior decisions on the-subject. We said:

“In the absence of some specific statutory requirement, the *1328 general rule undoubtedly is that, where a notice of appeal is properly addressed to the adverse party by name, it is sufficient in form; and if such adverse party be an artificial or corporate body, service of such notice upon officials or agents specified by the statute is a good service upon the adverse party, and confers jurisdiction over it, even though the name of the official or agent be not included as an addressee.”

Section 839, Code of 1897, provided that an appeal might be taken by any person affected by the levy of a special assessment, “by serving written notice thereof upon the mayor or clerk.” That statute, in force at the time of the instant appeals, contained no requirement as to the addressee of the notice. It is to be noted, however, that Section 6064, Code of 1924, provides that the notice of appeal in such cases shall be “directed to the defendant.” We are of the opinion that the notices in question come within the rule announced in Lundy v. City of Ames, supra, rather than that of the cases relied upon by appellant, and that the notices of appeal addressed to the city of Marshalltown were sufficient in form to confer jurisdiction upon the district court to hear and determine the appeals. No appeal was taken from the decrees of the district court canceling the assessments, and they became final. The conclusion so reached is determinative of appellant’s claim against the defendant property owners, unless the further contention that, since neither the appellant nor its assignor, the contractor, was a party to the appeals, the judgments therein are not conclusive as to it, must be sustained.

III. The appellant, as assignee of the certificates, does not claim to-stand in the attitude of a holder in due course of negotiable paper. It stands in the shoes of its assignor, the contractor. It took the assignment while the appeals were pending. The certificates appear to have been prematurely issued, before the determination of the appeals, but the rights of the parties cannot be affected by that fact. The appellant took them subject to the outcome of the appeals.

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