21 Ind. App. 534 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1899
Appellant instituted this action against appellees to foreclose a lien for street improvement assessment against lot No. 1 of Fletcher’s addition to the city of Indianapolis. The work contracted to be done was the filling of what is designated in the complaint as the “State Ditch” in the city of Indianapolis. A copy of the contract for the performance of the work entered into between the board of public works of said city and appellant, and of the assessment roll for said work, are made parts of the complaint. An attempt is made to show the location and direction, with reference to said lot, of the ditch by a diagram, which is filed with the complaint as an exhibit. This exhibit is not, however, the foundation of the action, and cannot be made a part of the complaint by attaching it thereto and naming it an exhibit.
Appellees filed the following answer: “For answer to the amended complaint herein, the defendants say that the contract for the improvement of Columbia avenue, mentioned in the complaint, was awarded to the plaintiff as alleged, but that the price for said improvement was three and 50-100 dollars ($3.50) per lineal foot on each side of said street, including street intersections; that the total length of said improvement was twenty (20) feet, and the total, cost of said improvement was one hundred and forty dollars ($140.00); that one-half of the street intersections was apportioned.upon the lots and land abutting upon the intersecting street for a distance to the street line of the first street extending' across the said intersecting street in either direction from said Columbia avenue in the sum of thirty-five dollars ($35.00), leaving one hundred and five dollars ($105.00) to be assessed upon the property on Columbia avenue abutting upon the part of the street improved as alleged in the com
It will be observed that the answer attacks only the amount of the assessment. Under the statute, this right is given when, as in the case before us, the property owner has not signed any waiver, or exercised or claimed the option of paying the assessments in installments. Acts of 1895, pp. 386, 387. Section 5 of the same act at page 384 provides: * * * “the cost of any street or alley improvement shall be estimated according to the- whole length of the street or
The record presents a case of ordinary street improvement, in which it appears from the answer that the property against which it is sought to enforce the lien has paid one-half the cost of the improvement, which is all, under the averments of the answer and the statute, that could be legally assessed against it. Judgment affirmed.