Lund v. Board of Commissioners
Lund v. Board of Commissioners
Opinion of the Court
— Appellant brought this action to recover the sum of $3,500, with interest, due for work and labor done and materials furnished by him for appellee, at its special instance and request, in the erection and construction of a courthouse in the town of Kentland. Appellant filed an amended complaint in three paragraphs, and afterwards two additional paragraphs were filed.
The first paragraph of the amended complaint was a common count, including a bill of particulars, for work and labor done and for material furnished at the special instance and request of appellee, and alleging that appellee had received and accepted said work, labor and material; also alleging the presentation of the claim to the board of commissioners, and its disallowance.
The third paragraph set forth the facts showing the adoption of plans and specifications by the board, the solicitation of bids by advertising, the presentation of appellant’s bid with others, the awarding of the contract to appellant, the work done by him under said contract, the suit to enjoin the board from proceeding under said contract, the appeal to the Supreme Court, and the reversal of said judgment, the request made by appellee after said reversal that appellant stop work, the submission of an estimate by the appellee to the county council of Newton county for another appropriation of money with which to complete said building, the appropriation thereof, the adoption of new plans and specifications for the completion of said building from the point where appellant had been compelled to stop work thereon, the letting of a new contract, and the erection and completion of said building by appellee; likewise, the presentation of appellant’s claim for allowance and its disallowance by appellee, also the request for an additional appropriation for the payment thereof,
The fourth paragraph was a common count for money paid by appellant for the use and benefit of appellee, at its special instance and request, for work and labor done and for material used in the erection and construction of the courthouse in the town of Kentland; alleging also the presentation of the claim to the board, and the disallowance thereof.
The fifth paragraph sets forth the facts similarly to the
A several demurrer, filed to each paragraph of the amended complaint, was sustained by the court, which ruling is assigned as error.
There is no allegation in any of the paragraphs that an appropriation was made by the county council with which to pay on the contract at the time it was entered into, or for work done and material furnished, for the value of which appellant sues.
“Hereafter the board of county commissioners * * * shall have no power whatever to make any allowance for voluntary services, or for things voluntarily furnished, and
“No warrants shall be drawn and no funds shall be paid out of the county treasury in payment of any claim on any contract with the commissioners for the execution of any public undertaking, except said contract has been let pursuant to the provisions of this act, nor unless said claim has been filed and allowed by the commissioners in the manner herein required.” §5956 Burns 1908, Acts 1899 p. 343, §39.
In fact, the tenor of the whole act is to curtail and control the power of public officers in the expenditure of public funds.
The vital and only question in this case is, Can appellant recover under the averments of his complaint, where no appropriation is alleged to have been made to cover the expenditure for which he brings this action?
Moreover, the Supreme Court in the case of State, ex rel., v. Board, etc. (1905), 165 Ind. 262, has fully determined the rights of appellant and appellee, with reference to the contract attempted to be made, the material furnished and the work done, for which this action is brought, as averred in the third and fifth paragraphs of the complaint. So that at the time this action was brought appellant was no stranger to the rulings of the court with reference to this statute. Whatever hardship, if any, befalls him is of his own choosing, with full knowledge of the situation and circumstances.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Lund v. Board of Commissioners of the County of Newton
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Published