Court Opinion

ID: 7112739
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:28:22.072477+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:16.279249
License: Public Domain

McClain, J.
1. Civil township: action against: jurisdiction: waiver. One of the grounds for sustaining defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was that defendant is not a corporation nor a legal entity, and that no judgment could properly be rendered against it for that reason, and we think that this ground of the motion was well taken. It has been repeatedly held that a civil township is not a corporation and cannot be sued. Township of West Bend v. Munch, 52 Iowa, 132; Wells v. Grubb, 58 Iowa, 384; Bells v. Dermody, 114 Iowa, 344; Hanson v. Cresco, 132 Iowa, 533. This objection appears on the face of the plaintiff’s petition, and might have been raised by demurrer, but a failure to demur was not a waiver of the objection, and the defendant notwithstanding its omission to interpose a demurrer on this ground was still at liberty to raise the question in any other proper manner. Code, section 3564; Pardey v. Mechanicsville, 101 Iowa, 266; Pierson v. Independent School District, 106 Iowa, 695; Frum v. Keeney, 109 Iowa, 393.
If the objection had been one which could be cured by amendment, then no doubt the court should have overruled the motion to direct a verdict on this ground, and allowed the defendant to interpose its'objection by motion in arrest of judgment, when the new matter which might have been pleaded to obviate the ground of demurrer could have been put in issue by the defendant, and plaintiff’s cause of action, if any it had, could have been established as against the objection raised. Code, sections 3758, 3760; Enix v. Iowa Central R. Co., 114 Iowa, 508; Wrought Iron Bridge Co. v. Greene, 53 Iowa, 562. But here the ground of demurrer which should have been interposed was that the court had no jurisdiction, and this objection was one which could not *711possibly be cured by any amendment. It is too elementary to require citation of authorities that want of jurisdiction is an objection which may be raised at any stage in the proceedings up to the final determination of an appeal. As no allegations of fact could have made out a cause of action against the township on which judgment might be rendered against it, the court was not required to go through the useless formality of submitting the case to the jury, and taking its verdict, and then directing a judgment for the defendant on a motion in arrest. It has been held that, where the allegations of the petition, although supported by proof, do not warrant a recovery, the court may properly direct a verdict for the defendant. Brown v. Cunningham, 82 Iowa, 512. But, as already indicated, we think it is not proper practice to raise a question as to the sufficiency of the allegations of- a pleading by motion for a directed verdict, where the defect might have been cured by amendment if the objection had been taken by demurrer, or by additional allegations if raised by motion in arrest of judgment. In this case, however, we cannot see how any prejudice can possibly have arisen to the plaintiff by directing a verdict when the objection was made instead of postponing the ruling of the court until it was raised by a motion in arrest.
2' AME' It is argued that, as the contract on which plaintiff sued was executed in the name of the defendant township by its trustees, defendant could be sued in the same name in which the promise was made by the trustees purporting to act for it. But the obstacle to the recovery of. the judgment against the defendant is not that defendant is not sued in its proper name, but that it cannot be sued at all. As before said, the objection goes to the jurisdiction of the court to entertain the action, and not to plaintiff’s right of action.
*712s. pleading: amendment. *711After the motion .to direct a verdict was made, plaintiff tendered various amendments, the purpose of which was to substitute as defendants the board of trustees of the town*712ship and tbe individual members of tbe board, and asked that the court take cognizance of tbe action in equity, and allow plaintiff’s claim to be established against sucb trustees. It was further asked, by way of .amendment, that a writ of mandamus be awarded to compel tbe trustees to perform the duty resting upon them of paying plaintiff’s claim from the taxes set aside for that purpose. But plaintiff was not entitled to set up a wholly new cause of action against new defendants by amendments tendered after tbe case was l-eady for submission to the jury. If plaintiff was entitled to relief in equity, or in an action for mandamus to compel an application by the trustees or clerk of funds of the township to tbe payment of this claim, it should have dismissed tbe action wrongfully brought, and instituted an appropriate action against tbe proper parties. It was not entitled to institute a wholly new and independent action against new parties by way of amendment after the case was ready for submission to the jury on its merits. The proper function of an amendment after tbe trial of the case is to conform the pleadings to the proofs, but it is not permitted to substitute a new cause of action or bring in new parties. The cases which could be cited in support of this general proposition are so numerous that it is sufficient to refer to the notes on the subject of amendment in the Code and supplement. In Hook v. Garfield Coal Co., 112 Iowa, 210, it was held proper to allow substitution of parties plaintiff on their own application, but we are not cited to any authority which would justify the court in postponing the trial so that new defendants can be brought in to respond in a wholly different action, in order that plaintiff may be allowed to have some relief against them which he is unable to secure against the defendant.
The judgment is affirmed.