delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit was instituted by tbe Jackson Loan & Investment Company, as assignee of J. W. Cassady, against the owners of lots numbered from 700 to 774, inclusive, sit*426uate on both sides of Jefferson street, between Clay and Shelby, in Louisville, to collect certain apportionment warrants which had been issued by the city for the cost of sidewalks constructed under a contract between the city and J. W. Cassady made pursuant to an ordinance approved April 25, 1892.
The petition, as amended, contains the usual and necessary averments, the city of Louisville being made a party defendant to the action.
The abutting property holders in their answer deny that prior to the passage of the ordinance of April 25, 1892, and of the making of the contract in pursuance thereof, the grade of Jefferson street between Clay and Shelby had ever been fixed or established by any ordinance or resolution of the general council, or under any contract made by the city with plaintiffs, or that the city engineer had laid out a carriageway in the center of Jefferson street, between Clay and Shelby, of the uniform width of 36 feet, and had left on either side of this carriageway 12 feet, or any part thereof, for a sidewalk, or that the city engineer had prepared a map for the grade of Jefferson street between Clay and Shelby which had been approved by the general council of the city.
On final hearing the chancellor dismissed plaintiffs’ petition against the abutting property holders upon the ground that the grade of Jefferson street between Clay and Shelby- streets had not been fixed or established by any ordinance or resolution of the general council of the city prior to the ordinance of April 25, 1892, which directed the construction of the sidewalks in question, and rendered judgment in favor of appellee against the city for the aggregate amount of the apportionment warrants *427sued on; and from that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
The plaintiffs filed with their original petition a copy of the ordinance approved April 25, 1892, directing the sidewalks on both sides of Jefferson street, between Clay and Shelby, in front of lots numbered 700 to 774, inclusive, to be constructed, which was signed by the mayor, and attested by the clerk of the board of councilmen and the comptroller, and also copies of the contract for the construction of the work, and of the apportionment warrants issued pursuant thereto, similarly signed and attested.
Section 4 of the act to amend the charter of the city of Louisville, approved March 24, 1882, provides that the cost of making sidewalks “shall be apportioned to. the front feet as owned by the parties respectively fronting the improvement, except that each corner lot shall pay the cost of its sidewalk intersecting.” Section 6 of the same act provides that, “in all actions to enforce liens authorized by this act, a copy of the- ordinance authorizing the improvement or work, the contract therefor and the apportionment warrants, attested by the clerk of the board of councilmen, shall be proof conclusive of the clue passage, approval and publication of the ordinance, and of the due exectition and ■ approval of the contract ami shall be prima facie evidence of every other fact necessary to be established by the plaintiff, in' such action to entitle him to the relief authorised by this act.’-’ The only testimony .offered by the lot owners to rebut the prima facie case made out by these exhibits is that of Assistant Engineer Breed, who testified that he was the acting engineer of the city of Louisville, and had charge of the maps of the engineering department of the city, and that there was nothing on these maps which showed that the grade of Jeffer*428son street, between Clay and Shelby, was established by the general council prior to July 1, 1895, — some time after the work sued on had been completed.
Section 2899, Kentucky Statutes, which is a provision of the charter of the city of Louisville, provides that the comptroller of the city shall have the custody of the public records, the original rolls of ordinances of the general council, all original contracts, and such other records and documents of value which are not required to be deposited with any other officer, all of which shall be registered by numbers, dates, and contents; and, by section 2775, upon his certificate ordinances, contracts, and apportionments are made competent evidence in court.
As Assistant Engineer Breed is not made by law the custodian of the ordinances, resolutions, or original grade maps approved by the council, his testimony is wholly insufficient to rebut the legal presumption made out by the exhibits supra in favor of the plaintiffs; and the court erred in its judgment dismissing the plaintiffs’ petition as against the abutting property holders, and giving judgment against the city.
It is insisted for these defendants that the appeal— erroneously called the “cross appeal” — granted by this court to plaintiffs in the court below against them is void, because an appellee can not complain by cross appeal against a judgment in favor of his co-appellee, and for the further reason that these parties did not file in the office of the clerk of this court a copy of the judgment which they appealed from, or comply with the provisions of section 739 of the Code, in so far as that section' requires a statement. . •
The record shows that the abutting property hold*429ers voluntarily entered their written appearance to this appeal of the contractors, and made no objection thereto until after the case had been submitted, and after the expiration of the two years in which-such appeal may be taken. The steps taken in this case in bringing the abutting property holders before the court on the appeal of plaintiffs are identical with those taken in the case of City of Louisville v. Clark (decided on a former day of the present term of this court) p. 392 of this volume, [49 S. W., 18]; and, for the reasons pointed out in the opinion rendered in that case, the abutting property holders can not avail themselves of an -objection to such irregularity raised for the first time by brief on a final submission of the case on its merits. By the entry of their appearance and failure to make motion to dismiss the appeal before submission, they waived any right they may have had to object to the irregularities complained of.
It is strongly insisted by counsel that the judgment in this case should be affirmed because the exhibits filed with, and parts of, the petition show that each lot was charged with the cost of the work done and the material furnished in the construction of the sidewalks in its immediate front; that there was no apportioned cost as required by .the charter.
This defense is not made or relied on in the answer filed by appellees, and there is no proof in the record, outside of the exhibits, which conduces to establish the fact contended for. It was necessary that this defense should have been pleaded, but we are unable to- perceive that the exhibits referred to support the contention of appellees.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for proceedings consistent herewith.