193 Ky. 813 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1922
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
In tbe original petition it is alleged:
“That tbe improvement of Center street from Main street to Laurel avenue and Main street from Center street to First street was made iby this plaintiff and tbe work of said improvement was accepted pursuant to and by ordinances of tbe city of Corbin duly passed in accordance with law,”
and then it alleged the general council _ of tbe city of Corbin bad apportioned tbe cost of tbe improvement among tbe owners of tbe abutting lots, and fixed tbe amount apportioned against each lot.
In an amended petition thereafter filed it was alleged “that tbe improvement of Center street from Main street to Laurel avenue and tbe improvement of Main street from Center street to First street was provided for and ordered to be done by ordinances duly passed in accordance with law by tbe defendant, city of Corbin, and that pursuant to said ordinances a contract was made between the said city of Corbin and tbe plaintiff, George M. Eady Company, dated May 6, 1919, by which said George M. Eady Company agreed to make said improvement of said streets at tbe cost of tbe abutting property owners.”
Certain of tbe defendants filed their joint answer in tbe first paragraph of which they deny tbe city of Corbin is now or was at tbe time of the commencement of tbe action a city of tbe fourth class of tbe Commonwealth of Kentucky “for the reasons set forth in paragraph two hereof.” They then deny in tbe first paragraph any improvement of Center street or Main street in tbe city of Corbin,
“Was heretofore made or accepted pursuant to or by ordinance of tbe city of Corbin, or that any ordinance of the city of .Corbin was duly or at all passed in relation thereto, or that tbe city of Corbin, or its board of council, ever apportioned the cost of such improvement, or of any part thereof, or that any ordinance of tbe city of Corbin, or its board of council was ever passed or published-in relation.thereto, or that tbe city of Corbin, or its board of council, ever by ordinance or otherwise levied a tax against either of these defendants to cover such improvement, or any part thereof.”
In the third paragraph of the answer it is alleged that on the 9th day of July, 1918, J. A. Gilliam was appointed-mayor of the city of Corbin by the board of councilmen to fill the vacancy then existing because of the resignation of Nelson, who had been theretofore duly elected for a four year term ending’ the first Monday in January, 1922, and that at the November election, 1918, no election was held to fill the vacancy in the office of mayor caused by the resignation of Nelson, and that after said November election, 1918, the board of council had never reappointed Gilliam. The paragraph then proceeds to allege the city of Corbin did not have a board of council “at the time it undertook by ordinance to provide, for the improvement of Center street and Main street for which recovery is sought by the plaintiff in this action, because one of the members thereof, to-wit, J. A. Hood or Alex Hood, had theretofore removed from the corporate limits of the said city with no intention of returning thereto and had thereby vacated his office as such councilman; that at the time the defendant, city of Corbin, undertook to adopt a resolution designating the improvement of Center and Main streets, as well as the time-it undertook by ordinance to provide for the improvement of said streets, and also at the time it thereafter undertook to accept the improvement of said streets by the plaintiff and apportioned the cost thereof, it had no mayor or board of council because of the alleged vacancy therein by the re
Thereafter the circuit court sustained a demurrer to each of the three paragraphs of the answer and then the defendants filed an amended answer wherein they alleged that the city of Corbin and its board of council had fraudulently and in collusion with the plaintiff accepted the work and confirmed the estimate of the city engineer as to the cost thereof, and sets out in detail alleged facts and circumstances constituting such fraud and collusion.
Much evidence was taken on the issue of fraud and collusion, but upon a final submission the chancellor below held that it had not been sustained, and entered a judgment enforcing the plaintiff’s statutory liens, and from that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
Section 3570, Kentucky Statutes, being a part of the charter for cities of the fourth class, provides:
*818 “Before the board of council shall order the improvement of any street, alley, public way or sidewalk, as provided in section 3563, it shall adopt, a resolution designating the street or public ways or sidewalks proposed to be improved, setting’ out in general terms the character and extent of the proposed improvement and declaring such improvement to be a necessity.”
Section 3574, being a part of the same charter in prescribing how such liens for street improvements may be enforced, says:
“Such liens may be enforced, as other liens on real estate, by action brought in the name of the city or the contractor entitled thereto, and in any such action an allegation in'substance that the improvement had been made and the work accepted pursuant to and by ordinances of the city duly passed in accordance with law shall be a sufficient pleading of the ordinances and proceedings under which the work was done and accepted without setting out the same in full.”
The first complaint made by appellants is that there being no specific allegation in the plaintiff’s pleadings that such a resolution as is provided for in section 3570 by the board of council before the improvement was ordered, setting forth the character or extent of the improvement and declaring the same to be a necessity, the demurrer to the answer should have been carried back to the petition and sustained. The argument is that such a resolution is jurisdictional and is a condition precedent to the right of the council to enter into a contract for the improvement of streets, and is not therefore covered by or embraced in the provision of section 3574 authorizing the plaintiff in such an action to merely allege in substance that the improvement had been made and the work accepted pursuant to and by ordinances of the city duly passed in accordance with law, and such a pleading shall be a sufficient plea of the ordinances and proceedings under which the work was done and accepted.
Looking to the comprehensive purpose behind the enactment of the quoted provision in section 3574, and in the light of the abuses that enactment was intended to correct we cannot sustain this contention.
Formerly in such cases the rules of pleading required that a plaintiff should, to make his pleading good and to justify the enforcement of his lien, set out in detail and at length all the acts of the municipal board necessary to
Nor is there any hardship in this rule. The records of the city council are public records and available as well to the defendant as to the plaintiff, and the purpose manifestly was to relieve the plaintiff in such action from setting forth in detail all the proceedings thereof which go to make out for him a valid lien, and to require a defendant who relies upon anything shown in the record to defeat the lien to specifically point it out, and thereby simplify the pleadings and issues.
The language of section 3574 is sufficiently comprehensive to embrace the preliminary resolution required by section 3570, for it expressly says that such allegation ‘ ‘ shall be a sufficient pleading of the ordinances and proceedings under which the work was done and accepted, ’ ’ thereby clearly embracing not only all ordinances but all proceedings which led up to the doing of the work on the streets, and culminated in the acceptance thereof by the council. Johnson v. McKenna, 171 Ky. 389.
Even if the preliminary resolution setting forth the character and extent of the proposed improvement and declaring the necessity therefor, is jurisdictional, the jurisdictional fact depends upon what a public record shows, and it is within the power of the General Assembly in a matter of procedure to require the defendant in such an action to assume the burden .of showing from the record the want of jurisdiction.
For the purpose of this litigation it is unimportant whether the legislative act changing the city of Corbin from a fifth class to a fourth class city is unconstitutional. For if it be conceded that such an act was unconstitutional, which is not decided, the record discloses that the city has for several years been operating under the charter for cities of the fourth class and in any event as to
In the first paragraph of the answer above quoted it was denied any improvement of 'Center street or Main street was made or accepted pursuant to or by ordinances of the city of Corbin or that any ordinance of the city of Corbin was duly or at all passed in relation thereto, or the cost apportioned; and in the third paragraph of the answer after setting forth the reasons why, in the opinion of the pleader, the mayor and two other members of the council had, as alleged, forfeited their offices as such, it is then alleged, with those preceding allegations as a premise, that the city of 'Corbin did not have a board of council when it undertook by ordinance to provide for this improvement or at the time it adopted a resolution designating the improvement of Center and Main streets, and because as alleg*ed these three officials had forfeited their offices there was no quorum in the board of council when such resolutions, ordinances, etc., were passed or published; and then at the conclusion of these allegations, and as a resultant therefrom, it is alleged that no ordinances or resolution of the board of council making any designation for the improvement or providing for the improvement or accepting the work or apportioning the cost was ever passed or published.
In other words, interpreting paragraph one and paragraph three together the allegation is that because of the forfeiture by two members of the council of their offices and because an election to fill a vacancy in the office of mayor had not been held when it should have been, there was no quorum of the board of council authorized to take these steps or pass these ordinances.
Manifestly, the allegations of the third paragraph of the answer must be interpreted as an admission that a body theretofore composed of persons who had been elected or appointed members of the board of council for the city of Corbin had, assuming to be such members, although they had by their conduct forfeited their right to act as such, passed certain resolutions and ordinances which the defendants now allege were not passed because they had no right to act in the capacity of members of that board, and therefore, no such things were passed. Taking paragraph one and paragraph three together and considering their allegations together they plead nothing more nor less than a legal conclusion that because cer
In the case of Caruso v. Brown, 142 Ky. 76, the defendant was sued on a note and filed an answer in three paragraphs. In the first paragraph he denied that the note sued on was his individual obligation, and in the third paragraph he charged that because of the fraud of the plaintiff and his attorney he was induced to endorse the note in the belief that he was acting in his capacity only as treasurer of a certain company, and this court in construing those two paragraphs together said:
“Paragraph 1, in effect, denied that the note sued on was appellee’s individual obligation, while paragraph 3 makes plain why this allegation was made; that is, it shows that appellee endorsed the note upon the assurance that he was simply being hound in his official capacity. The effect of the two paragraphs, therefore, is to show that he was hound only in his official capacity and not in his individual capacity. ’ ’
The situation here is the same; the allegations in the third paragraph to the effect that there was no legal board of council make perfectly plain what the defendants meant in their first paragraph when they denied that the council had ever passed any such resolutions or ordinances.
Construing, therefore, the first and third paragraphs together the court did not err in overruling the demurrer to either of them. Bronaugh v. Commonwealth, 188 Ky. 121.
Counsel have apparently abandoned the idea that there was no action of the council because the three named members had forfeited their rights to act as members, but now rely upon the detached portion of the third paragraph wherein there is a denial there was any ordinance or resolution of the hoard of council designating the property for improvement or providing for the improvement or accepting the. work after the improvement, or apportioning the cost thereof. But that concluding clause of the third paragraph must he read and construed in the light of the previous allegations of that paragraph, and so read and construed it means only that those things
The pleading on its face shows that the board or certain persons elected as members of the board and assuming to act as such, undertook to take some action on those subjects, and yet the defendants, as it was their duty to do under the rule of pleading- laid down in section 3574, failed to point out any specific thing- which made the proceedings of the council illegal or which would defeat the right of the plaintiffs to enforce the lien.
The allegation as to Gilliam, the mayor, is that he was appointed mayor to fill a vacancy, but that because no election was thereafter held at the proper time as required by law, to elect one to thereafter fill the vacancy, Gilliam ceased to be mayor at that time; as to Hood it is alleged that he being one of the members of the council had before the passage of the ordinance providing for the improvement removed from the corporate limits of the city and had thereby vacated his office; as to Black, that he, although having previously been duly appointed and qualified as a member of the board, accepted an incompatible office and acted as such officer whereby he vacated his office as a member of the- board.
Prom this pleading it is apparent that each of the three persons referred to had been previously duly appointed or elected members of the board of council, and there is no allegation that the right or title of either of them to the office had ever been assailed, or that there had been a judgment of any court adjudging- the office of either of them to be vacant.
It is fundamental that the acts of one having color of title to an office and assuming to act as such are valid as to third persons and as to the public. It is a rule of public policy that the public is not required in its dealings with persons apparently having title to public office and being in possession, to look to the validity of their titles, but the acts of such persons having color of title and being in possession, insofar as they affqct such third persons and the public generally, will be treated with the same validity and binding force as if they were in fact officers de jure.
Under the allegations of the answer the three persons named were undoubtedly de facto members of the board and there having been no judgment of a court declaring their s'everal offices vacant, so far as the public was con
' Not only so, growing out of this rule upholding the acts of de facto officers is another well recognized rule which makes the pleading of appellants fatally defective. That is, in actions between third parties involving the validity of the conduct of public officials there can be no collateral attack upon the title of any such official assuming to act and apparently having the title to a public office. Howard v. Burke, 140 A. S. R. 159, and, note.
On the question of whether there was fraud or collusion between the members of the council and the contractor little need be said. There was voluminous evidence taken about a multitude of insignificant things. We have read the evidence carefully and concur with the finding of the chancellor below that there was no evidence of any such fraud or collusion as would justify a denial of the plaintiff’s right to recover.
Some of the evidence dealt with the cost of street improvements in Barbourville and Williamsburg, nearby cities, and it was sought to show that the work at those places was done at a much smaller price; but the evidence for the plaintiff satisfactorily shows that the work in those places had been done under different contracts and different specifications.
Again, it was sought to show that the dirt excavated was dumped on the lot of one of the members of the street committee, thereby largely increasing its value, but there is nothing from which it may be assumed that this was more than an accident, or at most that the lot was selected because of its convenience. Besides the evidence unmistakably shows that dirt was dumped on many other lots.
It is further sought to show that the inspection by the street committee was very superficial and incomplete, and that members of the committee had declined during the inspection to take up a part of the street to see whether the specifications had been complied with. The evidence, however, satisfactorily shows that there was a bona fide inspection, and that the contractors and committee declined to have the work dug up because it would involve immediately having repairs made in the new street. There were many other similar unimportant things gone into in the evidence, which it would be unprofitable to discuss, but it is sufficient to say each member of the council,
Judgment affirmed.