30 Ind. 192 | Ind. | 1868
The common council of the city of Lafayette, in the year 1865, without petition from the owners of property along the line of Cincinnati street, by unanimous vote, ordered the grading, graveling, and paving of said street, and directed specifications of the work and material required therefor to be prepared, and the work advertised for contract. This having been done, a contract was made and approved by the council. Before any work had been done under the contract, a resolution was adopted reducing the quality and quantity of material to be used in executing the contract, and the contract price to be paid; the modification
It is provided by section 69 of the act “forthe incorporation of cities,” 1 G. & H. 235, in force when- this contract was made, that upon appeal “no question- ©f fact shall be tried which may arise prior to the making ©f the contract for the said improvement, under the order of council. * * * and in case the court or jury shall find,, upon trial, that the proceedings of said officers, subsequent to said order directing the work to be done, arc regular, that a contract has been made, that the work has been done, in whole or in part, according to the contract, and that the estimate has been properly made thereon, then said court shall- direct
. Á property holder cannot quietly permit money to bo expended in work which benefits his land, under a contract with the city, and then deny the power of the city to make the contract. Palmer v. Stumph, 29 Ind. 329.
The modifications of the contract, under the order of the council, before the work was commenced, became a part of the contract, and cannot be questioned on appeal. The first paragraph of the answer filed by the appellant states the change made in the contract as a ground of defense. To this a demurrer was properly sustained.
The second paragraph states that by the terms of the contract, if any extensions of time wore made, a specified sum was to be deducted from the contract price; that such extensions were made and a sufficient sum was not deducted.
The third paragraph states that the city engineer refused to make the third and final estimate and accept the work. Demurrers were sustained to each.
These paragraphs were filed as answers to the transcript, which the statute declares shall ho treated as a complaint. It is evident that they can in no case bo good, except as to a part of the sum for which the last precept issued. They do not answer the entire complaint.
The pleas should have been directed alone to the third
The judgment is affirmed, with, ten per cent, damages and costs.