79 Mo. App. 70 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
Plaintiffs sued for damages growing out of a contract they had with defendant city for grading a certain street. The matter of complaint was that through the fault of the city plaintiffs were not allowed to complete the work contracted for, and that by reason thereof they were damaged.
Subsequently the city by ordinance changed the grade of a portion of the street which plaintiffs undertook to grade and macadamized the same, thereby adding another obstacle to the completion of plaintiffs’ contract.
In this action plaintiffs claim that because of the failure of the city to settle, or have assessed and paid the damages to abutting property, they were deprived of the right to complete the work which they had contracted to do and thereafter get pay for the same, and hence were damaged, not only for the cost of the grading actually done, and for which they received no compensation, but also what profit they would have made on the work which they did not do and which was included in their contract.
At a trial below by the court without the aid of a jury, the defendant city had judgment and plaintiffs appealed.
It comes then to this: Plaintiffs have done a large amount of work in pursuance of their contract with the city, and for which they have received no compensation; by no fault of theirs the work was not finished and hence by reason of the decision in 110 Mo. supra, they can not demand of the city an assessment against the abutting owners. Unless then there is something in the statute law governing cities of this class, or something in the terms of the contract between the plaintiffs and defendant, taking said city out of the general rule, it ought to answer for a violation of its contract.
The city owed an implied duty to plaintiffs to open a way for the doing of the work. Although the contract did not in terms provide that the city should adjust the damages done to property owners, it was yet its plain duty to do so. It had the power, while plaintiffs had not. It is proper to apply the same rule here as was done in Murray v. Kansas City, 47 Mo. App. 105, where the defendant contracted with Murray to build a viaduct at a proposed extension of a street, but -where a right of way had not then been secured. Wo held that the city could make the contract and that there was an implied obligation resting on it to secure the right of way. If it failed to do this and the property owner enjoined Murray from constructing the work, then the city became liable to the contractor for damages, for failure to do its duty. Oster v. Jefferson,57 Mo. App. 485,is also a case somewhat in point. It was there said, that the defendant city “employed plaintiff to improve the street with the understanding that such work was to be paid for out of a fund to be collected from the owners of adjoining lots. The further facts then appearing that the work was done as agreed, but that the city failed or declined to make any effort within a reasonable time to assess and collect from the abutting owners and thereby
Under some municipal charters contractors are 'expressly deprived of any right to claim anything from the city because of work of this character undertaken or done; but we find no such exemption in the charter of cities of the class to which the defendant at the time belonged. Nor is there any clause in the contract between these parties that can be so construed. It is there provided, it is true, that when the improvement is completed the contractor shall look to the fund collected by the city on special tax bills issued against the abutting property, and that the contractor shall have no recourse on the city because of a failure to collect the same. But there is no clause or sentence that the contractor will waive any demand or charge against the city for its failure to keep its contract and permit the contractor to go forward and complete the work — when and only when said contractor would be entitled to have tax bills issued to raise the fund to pay for the work.
In conclusion, it seems to us, that for plaintiffs’ failure to perform their entire contract and thereafter get the pay they stipulated for, the defendant, under the evidence, was to blame.
The judgment then will be reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.