194 Iowa 136 | Iowa | 1922
The defendant city was constituted by ordinance as a single sewer district. It had a sewer system which had been constructed some years before, and which did not serve all parts of the city. It purported to enlarge and extend its system, and for that purpose purported to follow statutory procedure. A contract was let, and afterwards performed, and a plat and schedule of assessments were duly filed. A day
Appellants have not confined themselves in argument to this narrow ground. We are not permitted, however, to ignore the limitations which they have voluntarily put upon themselves. This is not a case where facts have been discovered too late for the purpose of an appeal. The suit Avas brought within the statutory time allowed for an appeal. The trial court held that the evidence disclosed neither fraud nor want of jurisdiction. As evidence of fraud, the appellants rely upon a certain departure in the performance of the contract from the specifications. These required that in the construction of the manholes hard brick should be used. At the time of the construction, the only hard brick that were available in the market were too hard for the purpose of such construction. The city and the contractor were confronted with the possibility of delay on such account. The situation was met by the use of softer brick, and the required hardness was provided for by the use of cement. This met the approval of the engineer, both in advance of its use and after. The testimony is undisputed that the result is the full equivalent of that which was contracted for, and its cost was substantially the same. The situation was' fully known and acquiesced in by the city officials and by the property owners. There was neither deception nor bad faith to any degree, nor was the result derogatory to the interests of the city or of the
On the question of jurisdiction, the principal complaint in appellants’ argument is directed to certain voluntary proceedings between the city and certain property owners, whereby the original plan was to some extent extended. This was done after the contract had been let and largely performed. Even though this were irregular, and even illegal, it did not destroy the jurisdiction of the city council which it had previously attained, nor render void its-acts done pursuant to such jurisdiction attained. No jurisdictional defect is pointed out to us in any of the proceedings leading up to the letting of the contract. The subsequent illegality, if any, therefore, could not have the effect to nullify and render void all the prior procedure. The illegality, if such, could have been relied upon by. objections before the city council, and by appeal to the district court. The plaintiffs could thereby have been fully protected against any injurious results to them by reason of such illegality. They cannot ignore their statutory remedy and use a mere illegality as a weapon to destroy the whole enterprise after it had been faithfully performed by the contractor. This disposes of the only ground upon which the plaintiffs can stand in an injunction suit. No useful purpose can be subserved on our part by a discussion of the many questions ably presented in the plaintiffs’ brief which would have been available to them in an appeal, but which are not available to them herein. The decree dismissing the petition must, therefore, be sustained.-—Affirmed.