159 Iowa 481 | Iowa | 1913
In 1905 the board of supervisors of Hancock county established drainage district No. 9, and the contract for the excavation of sections 3, 4, and 5 of the ditch was let to the Interstate Drainage & Investment Company. It completed the work, but “failed to perform its contract in the time and manner specified by the contract to do the work in good workmanlike manner with respect to the sides of the drainage ditch, in that the sides were left rough and uneven, and in giving proper slope, and that there was caving and injury in parts of the ditch that interfere with its efficiency, and failed to remove the dirt back from the edges of the ditch strictly and substantially as required by the contract. ’ ’ At least, the district court so decreed July 1, 1909, in an action by the plaintiffs in this case against the defendants other than the Farmers’ National Bank begun in March, 1908, praying that the defendant Sawyer, as treasurer of the county, be enjoined from paying certain warrants issued by the county auditor, and the defendant the Interstate Drainage & Investment Company from receiving the same. The facts were as follows: The contract price was $23,104.88, of which 80 per cent, or $18,500 had been paid the contractor in pursuance of section 1989-a9 Code Supplement, leaving $4,604.88 unpaid. The engineer in charge of the work certified that the drain had been constructed in a good and workmanlike manner, but not strictly according to the contract and specifications, but that it was a good job, and recommended that the final 20 per cent, of the contract price be paid except $1,000 to be withheld until some of the work should be completed. Though the improvement was not completed and had not been accepted, by the board of supervisors, that body about January 8, 1908, ordered that $3,604.88 be paid the contractor and $1,000 retained in accordance with the engineer’s recommendation. Thereupon the auditor issued three warrants, one for $1,000, another for $2,000, and the third for $604.88. These plaintiffs, whose lands were included in the districts with others numbering thirty-seven in
All the defendants appeared to the action at the April, 1908, term of court, and the trial was not begun until December 21, 1908. The cause was submitted February 13, 1909, and the decree entered as stated July 1, 1909, as prayed, and expressly declared that the board of supervisors and the engineer were without authority to dispense with the performances of the contract, set aside the acceptance of the work, and the defendants were enjoined from paying the warrants to the contractor or any other person in its behalf, as prayed. Thereafter, it was discovered that after the suit was begun and prior to the entry of the decree the defendant Sawyer as treasurer of the county, had paid the $2,000 warrant to the contractor and the warrant, of $604.88 to the Farmers’ National Bank to whom the contractor had assigned the warrant. Thereupon the present action was instituted for the purpose of amending the decree previously entered so as to render the same effective.
The petition herein alleged the facts heretofore recited; that the plaintiffs were not aware at any time prior to the entry of the decree in the former action that such payments
These were prosecuted where (1) errors were apparent
2. Same. newly discovere The requisites of a bill of review for newly discovered matter imposed by or deduced from these ordinances are said to be: (1) That the matter was discovered after the decree was rendered. (2) It could not have been discovered before by the exercise of reasonable diligence. (3) It is material, and such as, if true, ought to produce on another trial of the issue a different result on the merits. (4) It is not merely cumulative. Mead v. Arms, 3 Vt. 148 (21 Am. Dec. 581). That such bill would lie for newly discovered evidence or for new matter arising after the entry of decree is put beyond doubt by the authorities. Purcell v. Coleman, 4 Wall. 519 (18 L. Ed. 459); Scott’s Appeal, 112 Pa. 427 (5 Atl. 671); Mosher v. Mosher, 108 Mich. 612 (66 N. W. 486); Reynolds v. Reynolds, 88 Va. 149 (13 S. E. 395); Dingess v. Marcum, 41 W. Va. 757 (24 S. E. 624); Camp Mfg. Co. v. Parker (C. C.) 121 Fed. 195; Hill v. Phelps, 101 Fed. 650 (41 C. C. A. 569); 16 Cyc. 530.