157 Ind. 401 | Ind. | 1901
In 1898 the board of trustees of the town of Irvington entered into a contract with John Moore for the pavement of the roadway of Washington street, between Wallace street and Central avenue, with brick. Moore assigned the contract to appellee Smith, who constructed the pavement. In making the contract, and in accepting the work when completed, and in assessing the cost thereof against the abutting property, the board of trustees proceeded under §§4288 to 4300 Burns 1901, commonly known as the “Barrett law.” Appellants owned lots, abutting for 400 feet on the improvement, which were assessed their proportion of the cost. Appellants refused to pay the same, and appellee brought this suit to foreclose his lien. The complaint is in the usual form. A demurrer thereto was overruled. Appellants answered in five paragraphs, a demurrer to each of which was sustained, and appellants refusing to plead further, a judgment for the amount of the assessment and decree foreclosing appellee’s lien, was rendered against them. Three questions are presented hy the assignment of error. (1) The constitutionality of the Barrett law; (2) the validity of the contract under which the improvement was made; (3) the denial of a hearing on the question of benefits, as set forth in the fifth paragraph of answer, was in effect the taking of appellants’ property without just compensation and without due process of law.
I. The first of these questions has recently received
II. The second question is stated by appellants thus: “The board of trustees had no authority to contract for repairs to a street, and assess the cost thereof against abutting property as a part of the cost of construction.”
As preliminary to the question stated it is important, first, to determine whether the contract before us, as the same relates to the contractor’s duty for a period of seven years subsequent to the acceptance of the work by the town, is a contract for repairs, or a contract of guaranty that the improvement shall be executed, in all respects as good as the contractor has engaged to make it. It is alleged in the second paragraph of answer that the improvement consisted in the paving of the street with brick as described in the complaint; that certain written and printed plans, profiles, and specifications were by the express terms of the contract made a part thereof; that bids were made by others and by said John Moore, upon the terms and specifications set forth in said contract, and the work awarded to Moore under the terms thereof; that by the terms of the contract the contractor was obligated not only to improve the street by constructing the pavement in accordance with the plans and specifications, but was also by the express terms of the contract obligated to maintain the pavement in repair for a period of seven years from the time of approval of the assessment roll by the board of trustees, without any compensation in addition to that expressed in the contract, and by the express terms of the contract he was required to and did guarantee such repairs for the period of seven years. That part of the contract exhibited with the answer is as follows: “It is understood and agreed that this guaranty shall cover all repairs growing out of imperfections or unsuitability of
It is further alleged that the cost of keeping the pavement in repair as required by the contract was taken into consideration by the bidders and by Moore in submitting his bid, and was included in the contract price per lineal foot, for which the contractor performed his work, and for which the assessment was made.
It is proper to observe that appellants do not in their answer plead the contract in terms, nor inform us fully as to its contents. It may therefore be assumed, as against the
Kindred questions have been frequently decided by the courts, which decisions upon first blush seem to be in irreconcilable conflict, even those of the same state in some instances, but upon a closer examination it will be found that one uniform principle has been generally applied, and the diversity has arisen from an application of the principle to the facts of particular cases. The general rule being that when the contract amounts to nothing more than an agreement to make the work what it should have been in the first instance, it is a mere guaranty of the quality of the work, and is not unauthorized, but anything in excess of this is a contract for repairs, which is unauthorized in cases whex*e'the proper preliminary steps have not been taken, or in cases where the duty to repair orests upon the municipality
Among the cases applying’ the principle to instances wherein contracts had been made for maintenance or repairs, in excess of those necessitated by the default of the contractor, for a definite period, in connection with improvement contracts, are these: Brown v. Jenks (1893), 98 Cal. 10, 32 Pac. 701; Boyd v. City of Milwaukee (1896), 92 Wis. 456, 66 N. W. 603; City of Portland v. Paving Co. (1898), 33 Ore. 307, 52 Pac. 28, 44 L. R. A. 527, 72 Am. St. 713; McAllister v. City of Tacoma (1894), 9 Wash. 227, 37 Pac. 447, 658; People v. Maher (1890), 9 N. Y. Supp. 94; Fehler v. Gosnell (1896), 99 Ky. 380, 392, 35 S. W. 1125; Verdin v. City of St. Louis (1895), 131 Mo. 26, 33 S. W. 480, 36 S. W. 52; Alameda, etc., Co. v. Pringle (1900), 130 Cal. 226, 62 Pac. 394, 80 Am. St. 124.
As illustrative of the contracts under review in these last cases, it was said in the California case: “Besides it is for all repairs, and not such as may result from defects in the work.” In the Wisconsin case: “If the agreement to repair were confined to repairs made necessary by defective
III. In the fifth paragraph of answer it is alleged that the town proceeded under the Barrett law and gave the proper notice of the time and place for the hearing of the engineer’s report. The answer then continues: “And defendants aver that pursuant to the notice alleged in the complaint that a hearing would be accorded to the owners of property bordering on said improvement before a committee appointed by said board to consider the report of said engineer, defendants appeared before said committee at the time and place specified in said notice, and objected to the said report and the assessments made against their property by said report, on the ground that the cost of said improvement assessed against defendants’ said property and each piece and parcel thereof was largely in excess of the benefit received or which would be received by the said property from said improvement, and demanded a hearing to enable the defendants to show that the portion of the cost of said improvement assessed against their said property and each piece and parcel thereof was largely in excess of the benefits accrued or which would accrue to said property from, said improvement; but the defendants were by the said committee and the said board of trustees of said town denied a hearing as to said question of benefits to said property, and the said committee reported to the board of trustees of said
It is averred in the answer that appellants appeared before the special committee having the engineer’s report under consideration, at the time and placé specified in the notice, and objected to the report on the ground of excessive assessments against their property, and demanded a hearing to enable them to prove it. But the committee and also the boai’d of trustees denied them a hearing. What was the nature of the demand and denial? Was appellants’ offer to testify before the committee, or their offer to produce other competent witnesses who would testify concerning their bene-' fits, denied ? Did appellants appear before the board of trustees, as they had the right to do, and make objection, and demand a hearing? Or was the performance a verbal objection to the report, and demand for a hearing at some indefinite or unreasonable time, or before a jury, or at a time, or upon terms named by the objectors ? And how did they ascertain that the board denied them a hearing if they did not appear before it ? We are not informed on these matters, and we cannot enter the field of conjecture in quest of missing facts to make out a cause of defense. This court cannot accept the conclusion of the pleader, but must have before it the facts from which the conclusion is drawn to enable it to determine for itself whether a hearing was denied.
Assuming that both the committee and board of trustees refused to grant appellants a hearing, they could not be permitted to waive their right to bring mandamus to compel a hearing, or injunction against the approval of the engin
Some subsidiary questions touching tbe subject of repairs which have been discussed become immaterial under tbe view we have taken. Judgment affirmed.