81 Ind. App. 107 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1924
This is an action by appellants against appellees, David H. Bond, board of trustees of the town of Worthington, Indiana, Hobart Hedden, as clerk, and Charles A. Pottenger, as treasurer, of said town, to set aside on the ground of fraud, the acceptance by said board of trustees of a sanitary sewer, constructed by said Bond under a contract with it; to set aside, as fraudulent and void, the assessment roll in favor of said Bond; to enjoin the collection of the assessments therefor, the issuing of certificates thereon, and further payments to said contractor on account thereof, and from taking any further steps in the matter of said improvement. The complaint is in a single paragraph. Appellee Bond filed an answer thereto in four paragraphs. The appellees, other than. Bond, filed a like answer. A reply in general denial having been filed to
“Gaskets will be made of oakum or hemp twisted into strands of such size as will compress into joints, completely filling it all around so as to prevent the intrusion of mortar into the interior of the pipe. * * * Before cementing, the interior of the joints shall be carefully wiped smooth and the annular space must be completely cleaned of dirt, stones and water. A narrow gasket of oakum or hemp, dipped in cement grout shall be properly caulked into each joint, after which the cement mortar shall be introduced therein. Special care to properly fill the annular space at the bottom and sides as well as at the top of the joints with mortar*111 must be taken. The interior of the joint shall then be wiped clean of cement by a rubber disk or other improved device. ■ * * * The contractor may elect to be judge as to the best method of securing foundations for the sewer pipe in wet or unsuitable ground where extraordinary conditions exist. If he elects this method of procedure, the entire responsibility of securing satisfactory results must be assumed by the contractor.” It is further found that in different places in said sewer, the tile were laid in water bearing sand or soil, and that, in such cases, it was necessary to the efficiency and permanency of said sewer to use the gaskets of oakum, and to observe the methods of sealing and cementing the joints as specified; that in some of said water bearing sand or soil, said oakum was not used, and said specifications were not observed, with the result that said joints were left defective, leaving leaks therein, through which sand and water could enter into said sewer and obstruct the same, and through which sewage could leak; that, in the construction of said sewer, extraordinary conditions were found to exist in this, that wet or water bearing sand was encountered in many places in the trenches in which the pipes were to be laid, for a total distance of 2,300 feet; that the nature of the sand was such that the sewer pipe to be-laid therein, which were eighteen inches in diameter, required, in order to keep them from sinking and hold them secure, and to render said sewer lasting and efficient, that artificial foundations, either of timber or stone be used; that throughout said portions of said sewer trench, said contractor did not use or construct foundations of any kind whatever under the aforesaid 2,300 feet of said sewer pipe, but left the same without such foundation, because of which omission, said sewer line was liable to subside, break and part, and is yet liable to subside; break and part, and destroy entirely*112 the efficiency or usefulness of said sewer; that in two places along the course of that part of said sewer above mentioned, there have already been subsidences and a sinking and breaking, and a total stoppage of said sewer by reason of the lack of said foundation, and the proper closing of said joints; that the omissions of said foundations and the closing of said joints as before stated has rendered said sewer liable to sink, and it will probably do so in the future, in other places along said lines, and thereby wholly obstruct'and destroy its efficiency as a sanitary sewer; that, as shown by finding No. 9%, there was a failure to construct the manholes in said sewer of the size specified therefor, which resulted in a saving of fifteen per cent, of the amount it would have cost if they had been so constructed; that said contractor effected a further substantial saving of money by said other omissions in the construction of said sewer; that said sewer, because of the omissions of said contractor to follow the plans and specifications therefor, is left inefficient and insecure, and liable to sink and collapse at any point in-said water bearing sand formation, where foundations have not been laid, and will remain insecure and liable to collapse until said foundations are constructed under said sewer; that there was at no time any intent to defraud or actual fraud perpetrated upon the part of the contractor or engineer in charge, or said board, or any member thereof, or of any other officer of said town in the-construction of said sewer, or in the final acceptance of same, which was done in good faith;'that the said breaks in the sewer and subsidence caused thereby have been repaired, and that said sewer system is now working satisfactorily, and doing the work for which it was intended. The court stated the following conclusions of law on the facts found:
“(1) That the law is with the plaintiffs and that*113 the acceptance of said sewer by said town board, under the facts found in said findings, constitutes a constructive fraud for which said acceptance should be set aside, until conditions in conclusion No. 3 are complied with. (2) That said assessment roll, in so far as it affects the plaintiffs herein, should be set aside until conditions in conclusion No. 3 are complied with. (3) That the defendants, Board of Trustees of the Town of Worthington,' Hobart Hedden, as town clerk, and Charles A. Pottenger, as town treasurer of the town of Worthington, should be enjoined from taking any further steps to collect said assessments so set aside, and that said town board should be enjoined from making any new assessment roll or ordering any further acceptance of said sewer until, First, the contractor credits the original contract price with the difference in the cost of construction of manholes as specified in the plans and specifications and the manholes as actually constructed and referred to in Finding No. 9Sec-ond, until the contractor or his bondsmen reimburse the town of Worthington for expenses and obligations already incurred in repairing said sewer up to this date. Third, until said contractor or his bondsmen place on file with said town board a good and sufficient bond that he will indemnify the town of Worthington against all damages resulting to said sewer system as a result of any defect in construction thereof, and said bond is to remain in full force and effect for a period of five years from the date of the bond. Until the contractor complies with the three conditions above set out, said injunction remains in force, and when said contractor or his bondsmen fully complies with the three items set out in this conclusion, said injunction will abate and be dissolved. (4) Judgment against defendants for costs.”
Appellants filed a motion to modify the judgment in certain particulars, which was overruled. This appeal followed, based on an assignment of errors alleging that the court erred in stating each of its conclusions of law, and in overruling said last named motion.
Appellees, other than David H. Bond, have filed a motion to dismiss this appeal. Certain of the reasons given therefor have been rendered unavailing because of amendments subsequently made by leave of court, and hence will not be considered. The remaining reasons will now receive attention. It is contended that the town of Worthington, Indiana, was a necessary party, and that the record shows a failure to make it such. It suffices to say that if appellees’ contention were true, such omission would constitute merely a defect of parties. No question in that regard having been presented in the court below, it will be deemed waived on appeal. White v. Suggs (1914), 56 Ind. App. 572, 104 N. E. 55.
It is also contended that the board of trustees of the town of Worthington, Indiana, named as a defendant below, and an appellee in this court, is not a legal entity, and that since this is true, and the members of such board, in their official capacity as such trustees, were not made parties below, the appeal should be dismissed. Appellees are in error in making this contention. Boards of trustees of incorporated towns in this state are legal entities, as their existence is repeatedly recognized in the various sections of the several statutes relating to such towns, in which specific powers and duties are conferred and imposed upon such boards. The statute concerning mu-.
Appellants contend that the court erred in stating each of its conclusions of law. It will be observed that the court stated as a part of its first conclusion: “That the acceptance of said sewer by said town board, under the facts found in said findings, constitutes a constructive fraud.” This part of said conclusion, standing alone, appears to be correct, -in the light of the following decisions: Leader Pub. Co. v. Grant Trust, etc., Co. (1915), 182 Ind. 651, 108 N. E. 121; Cotterell, Admr., v. Koon (1898), 151 Ind. 182, 51 N. E. 235; Gorham v. Gorham (1913), 54 Ind. App. 408, 103 N. E. 16; Crawfordsville Trust Co. v. Ramsey (1913), 55 Ind. App. 40, 100 N. E. 1049, 102 N. E. 282; Alsmeier v. Adams (1914), 62 Ind. App. 219, 105 N. E. 1033, 109 N. E. 58; Windle v. City of Valparaiso (1916), 62 Ind. App. 342, 113 N. E. 429; Dunker v. Calahan (1916), 64 Ind. App. 624, 113 N. E. 15; Neil v. Turner (1919), 77 Ind. App. 78, 125 N. E. 228. However, we are warranted in assuming that it is correct, since appellees have not assigned cross-errors, and appellants, in part, base their right to a reversal thereon. When we take this conclusion of law in connection with the facts found, it is clear that appellants were entitled to conclusions of law on which a judgment setting aside the acceptance of said sewer, and the assessment roll therefor, could be based, and proper injunctive relief granted. Were such conclusions of law stated? As the third conclusion of law is, by reference, made a part of the first and second, we shall direct our attention to it first. It is there stated as a conclusion of law, in effect, that appellees, other than Bond, should be enjoined from taking any further steps to collect said assessments, so set aside, and that the town board should
We will now notice some of the objections urged by appellees in opposition to the conclusion we have announced. It is insisted that the complaint in this action is based on actual fraud, and, since the court found there was no such fraud intended or perpetrated, appellants cannot prevail in this action, as a party may not allege actual fraud and recover on constructive fraud. It is also insisted that the conclusion as to constructive fraud, as stated, was unwarranted, since it is not found that the board of trustees had knowledge that the sewer had not been constructed in substantial compliance with the plans and specifica
Appellees contend that the court ignored the concluding parts of the first and second conclusions of law, in the rendition of the judgment, as the acceptanee of the sewer, and the assessment roll therefor, were set aside thereby unconditionally, and hence any error in either of such conclusions, by reason of reference to conclusion No. 3, was rendered harmless. The rule which appellees seek to invoke is available only when a correct judgment is rendered on the conclusions remaining after the elimination of such erroneous portions. Was such a judgment rendered in the instant case? A judgment should be so construed as to give effect to all of its parts, and to every word of such parts, including such effects and consequences as follow by necessary legal implication from its terms, although not expressed. 23 Cyc 1101. In the contemplation of this rule, a clause in a judgment may receive a construction different from that which would have been adopted if it had stood alone, for the sake of giving effect to some other part thereof. Ex parte Beavers (1859), 34 Ala. 71. In other words, the judgment must be construed as a whole, in order to ascertain its true meaning. Drach v. Isola (1910), 40 Col. 134, 109 Pac. 748. Applying this rule to the judgment before us, we cannot say that the erroneous parts of said first and second conclusions were ignored, nor can we say that a correct judgment' was rendered, if they were ignored. While the language used in the first part of the judgment, if standing alone, would indicate that the accept
Again it is contended that each of the three requirements contained in conclusion No. 3 is favorable to appellants, and hence they have no right to complain because of their presence in said conclusion. As we understand, appellants are not complaining so much of the presence of these requirements in said conclusion, as they are of the absence of a requirement that appellee Bond should complete the sewer in substantial compliance with the contract. It is the substitution of said three requirements for the material one last named, that forms the basis of their complaint. Appellees, therefore, have not shown a sufficient reason for an application of the rule which they have sought to invoke.
Having reached the conclusion announced we find it unnecessary to consider the remaining error alleged. For the reasons stated, the judgment is reversed as to all appellants, except the following, who signed the waiver of error, pursuant to §8718 Burns’ Supp. 1921, Acts 1915 p. 548, as disclosed by the plea in bar, filed by appellees other than David H. Bond, viz.: Minnie C. Crites, George Secrest, Clarence W. Heston, Jessie M. Heston, Earl Dyer, May Burris, Allen Gaskill, Mervin G. Heston, Haston Cornwall, Mary A. Criss, Sarah M. Bunger, Fred R. Griffith, Annie Catterson, Thomas L. Catterson, Wm. F. Hansford, Josiah T. Walker, exec