Plaintiff Leonard F. Dolezal brought this action against defendants City of Cedar Rapids and its airport commission to collect damages for unjust enrichment. Trial court granted defendants’ combined motion for dismissal, summary judgment, and directed verdict. Plaintiff, appealing, alleges trial court erred in finding his claim subject to the time limitations of Iowa Code chapter 613A, Tort Liability of Governmental Subdivisions. We reverse and remand with directions.
Trial court decided the case on stipulated evidence. In 1977 defendants commenced condemnation proceedings against farmland that plaintiff leased, located adjacent to the Cedar Rapids airport. Defendants gave plaintiff notice on April 5, 1977, that the compensation commission would assess damages on April 27, 1977. Plaintiff and other interested persons sought to enjoin the commission’s meeting, challenging defendants’ right to condemn. No hearing was held on the injunction petition until its dismissal on August 8, 1977. In the meantime, the compensation commission met as scheduled and assessed damages.
Plaintiff, apparently relying on the injunction petition and lack of notice of termination of his tenancy, planted a crop of corn and soybeans on the land in early May 1977. He cultivated the crop throughout most of the growing season. Defendants concede their airport director had actual knowledge of plaintiff’s activities, and that they expressed no desire to plaintiff that cultivation cease. Immediately prior to harvest, defendants threatened plaintiff with criminal charges if he entered upon the land, and hired plaintiff’s former employees to harvest the crop on behalf of defendants. Defendants sold the crop and retained all profit above their harvesting expenses.
Plaintiff appealed from the compensation commission’s award, and was awarded $66,-747 by a Linn County jury on August 11, 1978. Defendants concede this award did not include compensation for the crop or for plaintiff’s labor and expenses in cultivating the crop. In this action plaintiff seeks the alleged value of his services and expenses in planting and tending the crop, on a theory of unjust enrichment. Trial court, responding to plaintiff’s motion for adjudication of law points, ruled the claim was within the tort definition of Iowa Code section 613A.1(3), and therefore subject to the notice and timeliness provisions of section 613A.5. Trial court found plaintiff failed to commence suit within two years of notice as required by section 613A.5, and granted defendants’ combined motion for dismissal, summary judgment, and directed verdict.
I. Applicability of Chapter 613A.
The parties contest the applicability of sections 613A.2 and 613A. 1(3) to plaintiff’s cause of action. 1 Plaintiff argues his unjust enrichment claim is not a tort within the scope of Iowa Code section 613A.2, thus rendering the notice and timely filing requirements of chapter 613A inapplicable. Defendants contend, in the alternative, that every claim against a municipality is subject to section 613A.2, that any exception should exist only for express contracts, and that plaintiff’s unjust enrichment cause of action is outside the scope of any contract exception this court may recognize.
Iowa Code section 613A.2 provides:
Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, every municipality is subject to liability for its torts and those of its officers, employees, and agents acting within the scope of their employment or duties, whether arising out of a governmental or proprietary function.
Chapter 613A was enacted to partially waive immunity of Iowa’s governmental subdivisions and provide for their liability in tort.
Lemon v. City of Muscatine,
A tort within the scope of section 613A.2 encompasses:
[E]very civil wrong which results in wrongful death or injury to person or injury to property or injury to personal or property rights and includes but is not restricted to actions based upon negligence; error or omission; nuisance; breach of duty, whether statutory or other duty or denial or impairment of any right under any constitutional provision, statute or rule of law.
Iowa Code § 613A.1(3) (1981). The legislature has given the definition a wide range, eliminating common-law immunity in tort except for those specifically excluded in section 613A.4.
Symmonds v. Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad,
Chapter 613A has not always been so widely applicable. Iowa Code section 613A.1(3) (1973) defined a tort as:
[Ejvery civil wrong which results in wrongful death or injury to person or injury to property and includes but is not restricted to actions based upon negligence, breach of duty, and nuisance.
In
Jahnke v. Incorporated City of Des Moines,
Following
Jahnke,
the legislature amended the tort definition in section 613A.1(3) to make clear that breach of statutory duty is within its scope. 1974 Iowa Acts ch. 1263, § 2 (codified at Iowa Code § 613A.1(3) (1975)). This change reflects legislative desire “to impose — in the same manner as in the private sector — municipal tort liability for negligence based on breach of a statutory duty.”
Wilson,
The legislature additionally amended section 613A.1(3) to include injuries to “personal or property rights,” and appended language rendering the act applicable to “denial or impairment of any right under any constitutional provision, statute or rule of law.” 1974 Iowa Acts eh. 1263, § 2 (codified at Iowa Code § 613A.1(3) (1975)). The clear intent of this amendment is to bring actions arising under 42 U.S.C.- section 1983 within the scope of the municipal duty to defend, hold harmless, and indemnify employees sued for acts committed within the scope of employment or duties.
See Rosales v. Lewis,
Plaintiff’s contention his claim is not within the scope of section 613A.2 is supported by our decisions filed before its enactment. This court routinely allowed actions in unjust enrichment, then characterized as implied contract, to proceed against municipalities.
Carlson v. City of Marshalltown,
*359
Assuming arguendo the legislature intended to include unjust enrichment claims within section 613A.2, its only conceivable purpose in doing so would be to impose the chapter’s notice and timeliness requirements. The legislative goal in enacting chapter 613A was not, however, the addition of restrictions to existing forms of action. Rather, the goal was waiver of existing immunity, subject to restrictions.
See Lemon,
Although the definition of claims subject to section 613A.2 is stated broadly in section 613A.1(3), it remains a definition of “tort” as used in section 613A.2, the enabling section of the act. On the other hand, “restitution” and “unjust enrichment” are modern designations for the older doctrine of quasi-contract or contracts implied in law, sometimes called constructive contracts.
3
Glass,
Defendants argue section 613A.2 is the sole creator of the right to sue a municipality, thus precluding plaintiff from sidestepping its notice and timeliness provisions. This argument is refuted by case precedent and Iowa statute. Municipalities traditionally have been empowered to sue and be sued, Iowa Code §§ 332.1, 368.2 (1966);
see
Iowa Code §§ 331.301, 364.1 (1981 & Supp. 1981), and been amenable to suit in unjust enrichment,
Carlson,
Defendants argue that if an exception to chapter 613A exists, it should be confined to express contracts, relying on
Kersten Co.,
Defendants attempt to characterize plaintiff’s claim as a tort, rather than one of unjust enrichment. They cite no authority for this argument, thus rendering it waived.
McSpadden v. Big Ben Coal Co.,
We hold plaintiff’s unjust enrichment claim is outside the scope of section 613A.2. The claim is therefore subject to the five-year statute of limitations on unwritten contracts. Iowa Code § 614.1(5) (1979);
Anderson v. Anderson,
II. Reinstatement of Defendants’ Counterclaim.
The “conclusion” in defendants’ brief casually requests, without citation of authority, that in the event plaintiff prevails here, that “the entire Ruling of the Court ... be reversed, including the Dismissal of the Defendants’ Counterclaim, because the only reason the Counterclaim was dismissed by the Trial Court was that the Plaintiff’s case was dismissed and there was no longer any matter against which the Counterclaim could constitute a set off.” Defendants’ failure to cross appeal from the dismissal has caused us to scrutinize this “request” with unusual care.
The general rule is that a party’s failure to appeal from an adverse trial court ruling renders the matter beyond our jurisdiction to adjudicate,
Musch v. Frost,
Trial court’s rulings on plaintiff’s motion for adjudication of law points and defendants’ motion for dismissal, summary judgment, and directed verdict were in error. We reverse and remand for consideration of plaintiff’s case and defendants’ claim for set off on the merits. Because evidence was closed and both parties rested, trial court should consider the evidence disclosed by the record already made and render judgment accordingly.
Collins v. Parsons College,
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.
Notes
. No claim is made that section 613A.5 applies in its own right, independent of sections 613A.2 and .1(3).
See Roberts v. Timmins,
. 1974 Iowa Acts ch. 1263, § 7 amended Iowa Code section 613A.8 to specifically include actions under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 within the municipal duty to defend, save harmless, and indemnify state officers, employees, and agents.
. Historically, because its predecessor forms of action in assumpsit (undertaking) involved enforcement of genuine contracts, the unjust enrichment cause of action was categorized along with them, as a quasi-contract. D. Dobbs, Handbook on the Law of Remedies § 4.2, at 235 (1973). In jurisdictions where form is material, it is properly brought at law as an action of contract. Restatement of Restitution § 5 (1937).
. We express no opinion regarding the applicability of our prior decisions,
e.g., Horrabin Paving Co. v. City of Creston,
