Harbo v. Board of County Commissioners
Harbo v. Board of County Commissioners
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff brought this action against defendant board to restrain it from further proceeding to erect a bridge across a small stream in Blue Earth county.
The complaint set forth plaintiff’s ownership of a quarter section of land; that defendant had wrongfully entered thereon, threatened
“Defendants now and here tender and offer to plaintiff that plaintiff may have and recover judgment against these defendants, perpetually restraining these defendants, each and every one of them, and all persons acting for them or under their direction, from entering in and upon and from trespassing on the premises described in plaintiff’s complaint, from appropriating any part thereof to their-own use, and from building a bridge upon said premises, save and except within- the lawful boundaries of said public highway aforesaid,, and save and except to so remove the material, tools, and implements-so placed upon plaintiff’s premises as aforesaid; and also tender and offer to plaintiff judgment for his proper costs and disbursements incurred herein to this date, including costs and disbursements necessary for the entering and docketing of the judgment herein; but defendants demand judgment against the plaintiff, that plaintiff have and recover no other and further relief against these defendants than as hereinbefore tendered, and that defendants have judgment.
From what we have said, it appears that defendant board admitted it was a trespasser upon plaintiff’s land when it entered upon the same, and in all that had been done towards the erection of the bridge when the suit was brought. The answer admitted the gist of plaintiff’s cause of action as set forth, and offered that judgment might be entered restraining and enjoining all further proceedings in the erection of a bridge at that point, together with judgment for plaintiff’s costs and disbursements theretofore incurred and to be incurred in entering and docketing the judgment. The offer was broad enough to justify an entry of judgment for all that plaintiff was entitled to under his complaint, for, while he demanded that defendant be enjoined from building the bridge on any part of the quarter section, he failed to allege that there was no public highway elsewhere upon his land, or that defendant intended or threatened to erect the bridge at any other point than the one specifically mentioned, or that it was not authorized by law to build the bridge on some other part of his land. And, independent of the offer, the relief to which plaintiff was entitled under the allegations of his complaint could have been had by a motion for judgment on the plead ings.
But, when we analyze other allegations in the answer and in the reply, we find that a new issue had been raised between the parties, and that was whether there was a public highway over and across plaintiff’s land along the north line, as averred in the answer. This was not proper matter for defendant to insert in an answer to a complaint containing the allegations we have referred to, for it was whol
On the only issue made by the pleadings, the defendant was the prevailing party, and under our statutes the prevailing party is entitled to recover costs and disbursements of the defeated party. The tender or offer for judgment found in the answer was explicit, and without qualification. As before stated, the plaintiff was entitled to have judgment entered for all that he had shown himself entitled to under the allegations of the complaint. If defendant injected into its answer statements of new matters, not constituting a defense or a counterclaim, thereby seeking to obtain an adjudication upon an irrelevant subject, plaintiff should have promptly objected, and thus eliminated the improper allegations. If, upon the other hand, he chose to put these allegations in issue by a reply,
It is urged by respondent’s counsel that the tender or offer for judgment found in the answer was too indefinite and uncertain to be of value, and that a judgment entered upon it would have been no protection to their client. Under the offer, and, as before stated, independently of the offer, plaintiff could have had judgment on the pleadings for all the relief he had shown himself entitled to on the allegations of his complaint. In so far as the judgment was against defendant for plaintiff’s costs and disbursements, it was erroneous.
On the cause being remanded, the court below will modify the judgment in accordance with these views.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CARL T. HARBO v. BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF BLUE EARTH COUNTY
- Status
- Published