Kaynor v. District Court
Kaynor v. District Court
Opinion of the Court
“And now on this 11th day of April, 1913, this cause being called for hearing upon the order procedendo of the Supreme Court of Iowa, the pleadings and the supplemental petition of the plaintiff, the several parties appearing by their attorneys and consenting thereto, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that all the proceedings for the establishing and enforcing the payment of an assessment against the property of the plaintiff, as shown and set out in the record herein, are void and of no legal force or effect, to charge the plaintiff or her said property with any liability whatsoever, and the same are hereby set aside and the defendants are hereby enjoined and restrained from all further prosecution of such proceedings.
" And it is further ordered and decreed that the defend*1058 ant, the city of Cedar Falls, its officers and agents, proceed within 10 days after the entering of this judgment to remove .the -cloud upon the title to the plaintiff’s said premises, by causing the redemption from the treasurer’s sale of plaintiff’s premises for the enforcement of said illegal assessment.
“It is further ordered that the plaintiff have judgment against the defendants for the costs herein accruing in this court, and the costs of the same in said Supreme Court, as shown by the statement of the clerk of said Supreme Court filed herein.”
This decree stands as the decree of the district court in-the premises. Thereafter, the city council, ignoring, as the plaintiff says, the provisions of said decree and -the decision of the Supreme Court in the premises, proceeded to reassess Lot 4 in Block 14 for the cost and expenses of constructing the permanent walk in front of plaintiff’s property, and reassessed the cost thereof to the lot in question, and by publication notified all persons interested to file any objection against the reassessment which they might have. Thereupon, plaintiff brought this action, and prayed that the officers of the city council appear and show cause why they should not be fined for contempt in violating the injunction and order of this court. This proceeding was heard, and the defendants discharged, and from this, an appeal is taken to this court, and this is the matter which we now have before us.
The only question presented involves the proper construction of the decision heretofore rendered by this court, and this involves the right of the defendants to reassess the cost of the improvement against the property. The decision of this case requires us to go somewhat back into the record in this ease.
Section 779 of the Code of 1897 authorizes and grants to cities the power -to provide for the construction of permanent sidewalks upon streets within its limits. An ordinance is essential to the right of a city to exercise the power granted in said statute, and to build permanent sidewalks.
“Where a city has undertaken to avail itself of the provisions of the statute, and has fixed in its general ordinance the mode of procedure, it is limited to the mode prescribed in the ordinance.”
It follows, therefore, that, if the city council had made it impractical or impossible for the plaintiff to' comply with the order, and construct the sidewalk herself, she cannot be held in default, or to have neglected or refused to comply
The pertinency of the mayor’s answer, “Will give you
“You must construct this sidewalk to the curb line and within 30 days, or you will be considered in default and we will construct it and charge the cost' to you, or assess it against your lot; but you, however, are not authorized or permitted to construct such a walk as we have ordered you to construct, unless you construct it at grade, and the city engineer will not give you the grade unless you agree to build the crosswalk from the corner of your lot to the curb line.”
To this end, the city forbade the engineer employed by the city to establish or point out grades unless such owner agreed to construct and pay for the crosswalks as*above described. No grade was given plaintiff. On this point, this court said in the former opinion:
*1062 “It is not merely a case of a void ordinance, but of an attempt on the part of the city officers to compel obedience thereto (that is, to the performance of a void ordinance), and to extort the payment of money, without the semblance of authority for so doing. ”
The fraud perpetrated upon the plaintiff consisted in this, that the city required the plaintiff to do that which, under the law, she was not required to do, -then sought to force her to do it; instructed the engineer to pursue a course which would force her to do it. If she omitted to do it, or failed to agree to do it or to bind herself to do it, she would be considered in default; and, being in default, the city would then proceed to construct the entire walk at her expense, and assess the cost to her. The right of the city to construct the walk, under Ordinance 31, could arise -only when she failed and neglected and refused to do so within 30 days after the passing of the resolution. If the city, then, by resolution or ordinance, or by its conduct, prevented her from doing this, she cannot be said to be in default, and, not being in default, she cannot be held liable for the walk constructed by the defendant city. This resolution and the notice to the plaintiff to construct this walk involved the very conditions which were held void in the former opinion of this court, though not specially written therein. As bearing upon this question, see Waterbury v. Morphew, 146 Iowa 313; Bowman v. City of Waverly, 155 Iowa 745. As said in the Bowman case, supra:
‘ ‘ An ordinance of the city required permanent sidewalks to be constructed at grade, and, as the street along Lot 1 had not been brought to grade, and the time within which plaintiff might have constructed the walk had elapsed, the proceedings of the city, if upheld, would have the effect of denying the plaintiff the opportunity, of constructing the walk himself, a privilege expressly conferred upon him. . . . Whether the city might have put in the walk without allowing the owner the privilege of doing so can make no difference.*1063 . . . It is enough that this was accorded, him under an ordinance conferring authority on the city to build at the lot owner’s cost, only in the event of his failure to do so within the time specified, and, inasmuch as he could not so perform, owing to default of the city in not bringing the street to grade, the latter cannot insist on construcling the walk.”
In the case at bar, the city could not insist upon constructing the walk and charging the cost of construction to the plaintiff, because it had fraudulently exacted of plaintiff, in the construction of the walk within the time limit, that which it was not the duty of the plaintiff to observe, and conditions were imposed which the city had no authority to impose under the law. Plaintiff was fraudulently denied the right to build the walk herself. She cannot be said to be in default for a failure to build. The city had no right, under such circumstances, to build and assess the cost to her. It had a right to build, but not at her expense. It is not a question of a right to reassess. The record discloses no right to assess at all. The ease is therefore — Reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.