55 Ind. App. 670 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1914
Appellant brought this action in the Hancock Circuit Court to enforce assessments against certain lots located in the city of Greenfield, Indiana, for the improvement of a street of such city. The proceeding for the street improvement in question was begun and carried forward to completion under the act of 1905' (Acts 1905 p. 219) and the amendment thereto passed in 1909 (Acts 1909 p. 412) relating to improvement of streets by cities. Appellant was the contractor and filed the complaint as such. The issues were formed by a general denial to the complaint and by a special answer and a reply thereto in general denial. The court made and filed a special finding of facts and pronounced its
It appears from the special answer and also from the special finding of facts that on August 4, 1909, the common council of the city of Greenfield passed a resolution for the improvement upon which the assessment sought to be collected is based. It also appears that such resolution was never at any time approved or vetoed by the mayor of Greenfield, and that the common council of that city did not at any time pass such resolution over the veto of the mayor by a vote of two-thirds of the-members elect of that body or that it did not repass such ordinance by such two-thirds vote on account of the failure of the mayor to approve it.
The legislature of 1905 passed a general act concerning municipal corporations, Acts 1905 p. 219. Section 52 of this act provides: ‘ The common council of every city shall have power to pass all ordinances, orders, resolutions and motions for the government of such city, for the control of its property and finances and for the appropriation of money. * * * No ordinance, order or resolution of the council shall become a law, or operative until it has been signed by the presiding officer thereof, and approved in writing by the mayor, or passed over his veto, as hereinafter provided, and, whenever necessary, promulgated according to law. * * * Every ordinance, order or resolution of the common council shall, immediately upon its passage, enrollment, attestation and signature by the clerk and presiding officer, be presented by the city clerk to the mayor, and a record of the time of such presentation made by the clerk. If the mayor approve such ordinance, order or resolution, he shall enter his approval thereon and sign the same, and the ordinance, order or resolution shall become a law. If he do not approve the
When a city of the fifth class undertakes any street, sewer or other public improvement, the common council in respect to such improvement occupies the position and discharges the duties and functions of a board of public works. A resolution for a street improvement adopted by the common council of a city of this class occupies the same legal status and is governed by the same law as a similar resolution adopted by the board of works of a city of one of the higher classes. Such a resolution does not require the signature of the mayor to make it operative. The conclusions of law stated by the trial court are erroneous and the judgment is reversed.
As no good purpose could be subserved by a retrial of this case, the trial court is directed to restate its conclusions of law in accordance with this opinion and to render judgment accordingly.
Note.—Reported in 104 N. E. 774. See, also, under (1) 28 Cyc. 356; (2) 28 Cyc. 997.