173 Ind. 226 | Ind. | 1909
Appellant and appellee, the Board of Commissioners of the County of Newton, filed and submitted to the Newton Circuit- Court an agreed statement of facts under §579 Burns 1908, §553 R. S. 1881. Upon this agreed case the parties requested the court to render such a judgment thereon as the law would warrant, and that justice be had between all the parties concerned. Upon the facts stated, the court made the following entry and judgment: “Come now the plaintiff, by T. B. Cunningham, his attorney, and the defendant, by John Higgins, its attorney, and present to the court an agreed ease, and file herein their agreed statement of their cause and of the matter of controversy between them and of the facts connected therewith, together with their affidavit showing said cause and controversy to be real, and which statement is in the words and figures as follows: [here the agreed statement of facts follows.] And the court having seen and inspected said statement, and being duly advised in the premises, finds the law in the case and of said controversy to be: That there is due to the plaintiff, Henry V. Templeton, the sum of $103.06
Appellant moved that the court modify this judgment as follows: “Comes now the plaintiff in the above entitled cause, and objects to the judgment and order as entered in said cause, and hereby moves that the court modify and change said judgment and order in this, to wit: That there is due to the plaintiff, Henry V. Templeton, the sum of $645.36, payable out of the funds arising from the sale of bonds, for the construction of the W. O. Thompson ditch, and if no funds are available that a peremptory writ of mandate be issued to it commanding defendant to pay said sum of $645.36 out of any available funds that may be on hands, or if none, to cause bonds to be issued as provided by law and sold.to raise said funds. Wherefore the plaintiff asks the court so to modify said judgment.”
The court denied this motion to modify, to which ruling plaintiff duly excepted. He appeals, and among other things assigns the following errors: (1) That the court erred in its conclusions of law upon the agreed statement of facts; (2) that the judgment is not supported by the evidence; (3) that the court erred in overruling the motion to modify the judgment.
The following, in brief, may be said to be the facts agreed upon by the parties in this ease: At the May term, 1904, of the Board of Commissioners of the County of Newton, W. O. Thompson and others filed a petition praying for the cleaning, deepening and widening of a certain ditch situated in Newton county, Indiana. This ditch was known and designated as the “W. O. Thompson ditch,” and was constructed under what is known as the “five-mile ditch law,” enacted by the legislature in 1891 (Acts 1891, p. 455,
The cost of the construction of the ditch, as let to Temple-ton and extending only to station 319, was $15,268.53. The
At the August term, 1906, of the board of commissioners, R. A. Laury, who had succeeded Hamilton as engineer in the proceedings, filed his final report therein, showing that the ditch was fully completed according to the plans and specifications of the viewers’ report, including the addi
“To the Honorable Board of Commissioners of the County of Newton:
The undersigned, appointed by your honors as engineer in the above case, begs leave to file this his final report in the said cause. I have this day examined said Thompson ditch and the various branches, and find that the contractor, H. V. Templeton, has completed his contract according to the terms thereof, and should be paid the remaining twenty per cent of the contract price, together with $216 for tile and $542.30 for excavating from stations 319 to 341.
Total amount of contract...............$15,810.93
Total amount paid on contract.......... 12,215.45
Total amount due to contractor.......... $3,595.48
Respectfully submitted,
R. A. Laury, Engineer.”
Among other things contained in the contract between the engineer and appellant, in respect to the construction of said ditch, it was provided that the work was to be done to the satisfaction and acceptance of the engineer in charge of said work, in the manner as directed by law, and that
The contention of appellant is that under the facts he is entitled to be awarded a writ of mandate against appellee, the board of commissioners, compelling it to allow him for all the work which he had performed, and to issue and sell bonds for the purpose of raising money sufficient to .pay what was due to him. On the other hand, counsel for the board of commissioners insist: (1) That the board had no authority, under the law, voluntarily to make itself a party to this proceeding, and to submit an agreed case under §579, supra; (2) that under the facts a writ of mandate is not the proper remedy and cannot be maintained; (3) that neither the engineer nor the board of commissioners had authority, as was done by such board and engineer, to enter into' a supplemental contract or agreement with appellant that the work of constructing the ditch between stations 319 and 341 — the latter being the outlet — should be performed under the original contract at the price of ten cents per cubic yard, at which price it was originally let to appellant. Their insistence is that this part of the construction of the ditch should have been readvertised and relet.
Counsel for appellant does not contend that the facts disclose any right of action in his favor against the board of commissioners, other than the right to be awarded a writ of mandate against the board, compelling it to allow appellant’s claim for work performed in constructing the ditch between stations 319 and 341, and to issue and sell bonds to raise funds for the payment of such claim. The question arises then, Is there any such a right of action shown under the facts in this case ? In the appeals in the cases of Conn v. Board, etc. (1898), 151 Ind. 517, and Studabaker v. Studabaker (1899), 152 Ind. 89, the same statute under which the ditch here involved was constructed was fully considered and construed in regard to the procedure of a contractor to secure pay for work performed in the construction of a ditch. In the case of Conn v. Board, etc., supra, a contractor sought to secure a writ of mandate compelling the board of commissioners to account to him and pay a claim arising out of work performed by him in the construction of a ditch. It was held that an action for mandate, under the facts therein alleged, could not be maintained. Under the construction which we aeeoi’ded the statute in that ease, we pointed out the specific method to be pursued by a contractor, under the statute in question, in order to obtain his money for work performed by him under the contract with the engineer. In this latter appeal it was held, among other things, that where a contractor has completed his section of a public drain under the provisions
It was further held in the ease of Conn v. Board, ete., supra, that if the engineer should refuse to issue the certificate, his duty to do so might, in a suit instituted by the contractor, be enforced by writ of mandate. It is well settled by repeated decisions of this court that if a specific remedy is provided by law, by which relief of an aggrieved party may be obtained, mandate will not lie. Board, etc., v. Branaman (1907), 169 Ind. 80; State, ex rel., v. Schmetzer (1901), 156 Ind. 528.
Upon the facts disclosed by the report of the engineer before set out, appellant should have procured from the engineer a certificate or voucher in order that he might present it to the auditor of the county, and thereby secure a warrant from that official for the money due him, provided there were funds on hand appropriated to the payment thereof. This method, as pointed out in Conn v. Board, etc., supra, was the proper one for appellant to pursue in order to obtain the money which he claims is due to him. But, under the facts in this case, it does not appear that he applied for and obtained from the engineer any certificate or voucher for such purpose. Consequently he is not in a position to assert that the board of commissioners was in the wrong on account of its refusal to issue bonds, and that, therefore, under the facts, he is entitled to be awarded a writ of mandate to compel the board to issue bonds as provided by the statute in question.
As shown by the facts, by the original report made by the viewers, the outlet. of the ditch was described as being at station 319, and the specifications made by the engineer so stated, but this report was referred back to the viewers, and was by them so amended as to show that the outlet of the ditch was to be at station 341, but by mistake or inadvertence the engineer’s specifications failed to show any part of the ditch between stations 319 and 341. Thereafter, upon the discovery of this fact, the record of the board of commissioners was, by a nunc pro tunc entry, corrected so as to show that the ditch was ordered to be established to station 341, and then by agreement between the engineer and Templeton, he, under his original contract, completed the construction of the ditch to station 341 at the same price of ten cents per cubic yard. That the board of county commissioners may correct its records nunc pro tunc, and that such records, when so made, must be regarded and accepted to the same extent as though they had been entered at the proper time, are well-settled principles. Kraus v. Lehman (1908), 170 Ind. 408.
In this case it does not appear that any of the property owners whose lands have been benefited by the improvement are objecting to appellant’s being paid for the work which he performed. In fact, so far as anything appears to the contrary, they were estopped from so doing, as they have silently stood by until the ditch was completed and their lands thereby benefited. Consequently, under the holding of this court in the case of Board, etc., v. Plotner (1897), 149 Ind. 116, and authorities there cited, they are not in a position, under the facts, to defeat appellant in recovering his compensation for the work performed. What right or authority then, under the law, has the board of commissioners in this case to defeat appellant, who, as it appears, had obeyed the orders of the board and completed his work according to the requirements of the contract under which the work was let to him by the engineer ?
The argument of appellee’s counsel, that the civil engineer should have given notice or readvertised, and thereupon have relet the additional work to be done between stations 319 and 341, which is shown to have been necessary to complete the ditch to its outlet, is witbont support. It mil be noted, as previously stated, that the original contract between appellant and the engineer for the
In the ease of Conn v. Board, etc., supra, in construing this same statute, we said: “Neither do we think it .is contemplated by this statute that the commissioners should sit as a board for the purpose of allowing the claims of con
By §§5700, 5702, supra, the duty to issue bonds based upon the assessments, in order to raise money to pay the cost and expense of the work, is expressly enjoined upon the board of commissioners. The discharge of this duty, upon a proper showing of facts in a suit by the contractor, may be compelled by writ of mandate. Or, in other words, if necessary to pay the cost and expense of the work, the board, in a suit by the contractor or other persons interested, may be mandated to issue bonds to an amount not exceeding the special benefits assessed against the lands in the taxing district.
We conclude that there was no case presented by the agreed statement of facts. While it is true that appellee is not complaining of the judgment, nevertheless, in order that appellant may be left unprejudiced by the judgment below in pursuing the remedy afforded him by the statute, we are of the opinion that, in the interest of justice, the judgment should be reversed in its entirety