Court Opinion

ID: 7094052
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:09:00.311965+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:11.176895
License: Public Domain

Dillon, Ch. J.
As the court in this case has been unable to agree, and is equally divided, so that the judgment below stands affirmed by operation of law, it is proposed only to state the question prescribed by the record. On the trial the plaintiff offered in evidence the instrument upon which the action is based, and made proof of his title thereto. He also introduced in evidence the record of the proceedings of the board of supervisors of Bremer county, of a date anterior to the commencement of this action, showing that the contract for building the court-house had been modified; that the court-house was afterward, by a vote of the board “accepted from the said Levally as the property of the county,” and payment made to him for the full amount due or *593the original contract. Here the plaintiff rested. Defendant produced a witness, and propounded to him the question, whether the court-house was completed at the time this suit was brought ? The plaintiff objected, for the reason, that the acceptance of the court-house by the county authorities was conclusive in the absence of fraud on the part of the agents of the county, and no fraud on their part was alleged or claimed. The court sustained the objection, and the defendant excepted.
Defendant then offered to prove by witnesses, that at the time this suit was brought, the court-house was not substantially completed. Plaintiff objected for the same reason, and, the objection being sustained, the defendant again excepted.
The rejection of this testimony is the error of which the appellant complains.
WsiaEt and Beck, J.J., are of opinion, that the record of the board of supervisors, which is not given in emtenso in the statement, shows that the court-house was accepted by the board as a completed building, and that this action of the board — no fraud on its part being alleged or claimed — is conclusive on the defendant; and hence the court below did not err in excluding the proposed evidence.
Cole, J., and Dillon, Ch. J., are of the opinion, that, while the record of the board of supervisors did show, that the building had been accepted as a completed building, the defendant had the right to prove, notwithstanding the act of acceptance by the county authorities, that, in point of fact, the building had not been substantially completed ; and hence the court below did err in not receiving the proposed testimony.
Affirmed.