Whitfield v. Sears

10 N.W.2d 564, 233 Iowa 887
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 27, 1943
DocketNo. 46290.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 10 N.W.2d 564 (Whitfield v. Sears) 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
Whitfield v. Sears, 10 N.W.2d 564, 233 Iowa 887 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This ease has been before us on a former appeal from a ruling sustaining defendants’, motion to dismiss plaintiff’s amended and substituted petition as amended. Whitfield v. Grimes, 229 Iowa 309, 294 N. W. 346. There has been no change of plaintiff's pleadings since that appeal except for an amendment substituting successor supervisors as defendants. (Throughout this opinion when we refer to “defendants” the term will include, where the context requires, not merely the present defendants but also their predecessors in office.)

Upon remand defendants filed answer in three divisions designed to raise three defenses:

1. That although this action was commenced before the bar of the statute of limitations fell, plaintiff has since pleaded a new cause of action and said new cause of action is barred.

2. That it would now be inequitable to compel reassessment of the lands of the drainage district since there have been “numerous transfers * * by reason of mortgage foreclosures, exchanges, tax sales, intervention of liens and subsequent assessments, descent and distribution and by divers other methods.”

3. A general denial of the allegations of the amended and substituted petition.

The pleadings are voluminous but we deem it unnecessary to review them for the purposes of this appeal. The allegations of the amended and substituted petition as amended, are sufficiently set out in our former opinion. Other pertinent pleadings will be mentioned as may become necessary.

I. Defendants claim the cause of action, as pleaded in plaintiff’s amended and substituted petition, is barred by the statute of limitations. The decision of the trial court is expressly based on that ground. The first proposition to confront us concerns the, availability of that defense in view of-the former appeal. The chronology is significant.

When plaintiff filed his amended and substituted petition (March 25, 1938) the three-year period under the statute of limitations, section 11007(4), Codes of Iowa, 1931, 1935, had *889 already expired on November 1, 1937. Whitfield v. Grimes, supra. Defendants thereafter (September 15, 1938) attacked it by motion to dismiss which alleged:

“That if any actionable breach of duty has been committed by the defendants * * * which would otherwise entitle the plaintiff to the relief demanded * * * in his amended and substituted petition * * * that said breach was committed more than ten years prior to the commencement of this action and is barred by the statute of limitations.” (Italics are ours.)

This motion was sustained January 26, 1939, and plaintiff given thirty days to plead over. On February 24, 1939, plaintiff amended, setting out the date of the first default in payment of interest and alleged that “thereafter, and within three (3) years of such default, [plaintiff] brought this action * * *

Thereafter, on March 11, 1939, defendants again filed motion to dismiss, identical with the motion of September 15, 1938. Again the motion was sustained and plaintiff then appealed. We have re-examined the briefs and arguments of counsel on that appeal, with special reference to the claim under the limitation statute. Plaintiff argued then that the three-year statute did not begin to run until the maturity and default of the bonds. Defendants responded:

“It will be noted in the beginning of the argument on the statute of limitations that two periods are referred to, but in the opinion of the defendants it makes no difference whether the statute of limitations is the ten year statute or the three year stahUe. It is the claim on the part of the defendants, as set up in their motion to dismiss, that the breach of duty of the Board of Supervisors, if any, occurred more than ten years prior to the bringing of plaintiff’s action.” (Italics are ours.)

Defendants, with knowledge that there was controversy both as to which limitation applied and as to the time the statute began to run, elected to base their whole case on the proposition that the cause of action arose in 1924 when the *890 levy was made, and that it was therefore barred under either statute.

We decided against their contention and held that the cause of action accrued when the bonds matured in 1934, and that the three-year limitation applied. At that time we said, at page 317 of 229 Iowa, page 349 of 294 N. W.:

“This is not an action founded on written contracts (the bonds-) the limitation on which is ten years under the provisions of section 11007, subsection 6. It is a suit against public officers growing out of the alleged omission of an official duty. Counsel refer to both limitations in argument. However, it is not material, for the purpose of this appeal, which statute was considered by the trial court because under defendants’ theory the suit is barred under both limitations.”

The pleadings of plaintiff were the same then as now. Defendants’ motion to dismiss then urged, in effect, that the cause of action accrued “more than ten years prior to the bringing of this action and therefore the plaintiff’s cause of action is barred by the statute of limitations.” “This action” which they referred to was the present action. The “cause of action” then was the same as now. If there has been a new cause of action pleaded by plaintiff since the statutory dead line, November 1, 1937, it is the very “cause of action” they then referred to and attacked in their motion to dismiss. They were not contending then that it was a new cause of action. That is a theory now urged in view of our decision that the three-year statute governed and the “cause of action” accrued in 1934 and not in 1924. Having failed in their contention as to when the cause of action accrued, they now propose to relitigate the issue of the statute of limitations on another theory of a new cause of action having been pleaded since November 1, 1937. This they cannot do. Hall v. City of Shenandoah, 179 Iowa 1192, 1204, 1205, 162 N. W. 575.

Division 1 of the answer pleads no new facts. The whole record of pleadings prior to answer, in the same form as now, was before us on the former appeal. There has -been no evidence offered in support of, defendants’ present contention that there was a new cause of action pleaded. Our *891 decision on the former appeal that “the action is not barred by the statute of limitations” became the law of the case and no new fact record is presented to avoid it. The theory of a “new cause of action” is an afterthought.

Defendants had the undoubted right to urge the statute of limitations either “by motion to dismiss or in the answer.” Section 11130, Code of Iowa, 1939. If they had failed by the first method and had taken no appeal, doubtless they could have again raised the same issue by answer. The decision of the trial court would not, in that event, have become the law of the case. McCord v. Page County, 192 Iowa 357, 184 N. W. 625; Whitfield v. Grimes, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.W.2d 564, 233 Iowa 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitfield-v-sears-iowa-1943.