Lead Opinion
But notwithstanding the court may have erred in the ground of its decision, the judgment must be allowed to stand if the plaintiff has failed to prove its averment that the assessment and collection of taxes were made by mistake, unless, as the
Some of the members of the court have come to entertain considerable doubt as to the correctness of the ruling, holding that there was an,estoppel in this case. But we think that we cannot go into that question. The case was not remanded. for a new trial, but for judgment in accordance with the opinion. The court below could have done nothing but render judgment if there had been no application for an order allowing the filing of an amended replication and the tender of a new issue upon the ground of a newly discovered fact material to the determination of the case. If without such application the plaintiff had claimed in the court below a light to a retrial xxpon, and redetermination of, fhe question of estoppel, the impropriety would have been manifest at once. The case might, to be sure, have been opened below, upon a proper showing, for the purpose of letting in new evidence upon old issues; but that would not have involved the retrial of issues to which the new evidence was not applicable. Where a case in equity, triable upon written evidence, involves independent issues, aud it is opened for the purpose of letting in newly discovered evidence xxpon one of
Taking, then, the former decision as res adjudícala, we have nothing for determination except the new is§ue tendered by' the amended replication. Does the evidence show that the assessment and collection of taxes were made by mistake?
The lands in controversy amount to about twenty-six hundred acres. This court found upon the former appeal that they were assessed to the defendant nearly every year from 1861 to 1868 inclusive, and that the plaintiff received from the defendant taxes on the land to the amount of more than six hundred dollars. The mistake, if any, in assessing this land to the defendant, and collecting taxes upon it, arose from the fact that the defendant was the undisputed owner of a large quantity of land in the county, and in making out the list of the defendant’s lands it was inadvertently made to comprise not only what the defendant confessedly owned, but all that it claimed to own, including-the lands in question.
That a mistake should be made for several years in regard
We are of opinion, then, that the judgment of the District Court must be
Affirmed.
Rehearing
on rehearing.
— A rehearing having been ordered in this case elaborate arguments have been made by counsel, and we have again examined the questions involved, and the result of such examination is that we adhere to the conclusion announced in the foregoing opinion.
When the cause was reversed upon the appeal, as reported in 44 Iowa, 335, it was remanded for one purpose only, which was to allow the plaintiff to show that the lands were taxed by inadvertence and mistake. An examination of the statement of facts preceding the opinion in that case shows that
We have said this much in addition to what is contained in the foregoing opinion to further show the manifest impropriety-of again determining the question as to just what portion of these lands were taxed, and for what years they were taxed. That was determined upon the first appeal.
"We desire to add nothing to what has been said as to the taxation having been the result of mistake or inadvertence. Counsel have discussed this question at length. We have re-examined the evidence and are satisfied with the conclusion already announced.
It is said in the foregoing opinion that some of the members of the court have cause to entertain doubts as to the
Former opinion adhered to.