17 Colo. App. 113 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1902
Appellee sued to recover compensation for printing official ballots, and printing and publishing election notices and list of nominations. Verdict and judgment were for him below.
2. Appellant contends:
a. That the county is not liable for the bill of appellee, because the statute has not made it so.
The statute provides that the county, through its proper officers, shall have the services performed and the materials furnished for which appellee sued. This duty carries with it the obligation to perform the act, and to provide for its payment.
“When the statutes provide that certain expenses in regard to elections shall be incurred by certain officers of counties * * * but are silent upon the question of payment, the general rule is usually applied, that whenever an active duty is imposed upon municipalities,, or public officers representing municipalities, the duty imposed carries with it the obligation on the part of the municipality to perform the act, bear the expense, and provide for its payment.” —Amer. and Eng. Enc. of Law, 2 ed., 858.
In Board of County Commissioners v. Stone et al., 11 Colo. App. 476, 53 Pac. 616, Board of County Commissioners of Pitkin County v. Price, supra, is approved, and the liability of the county for such expenses as herein involved, is conceded.
See also Board of County Commissioners of Rio Grande Co, v. Bloom, 14 Colo. App. 187, 59 Pac. 417.
b. That it was necessary to appellee’s case to show a prior appropriation under Mills’ Ann. Stats., vol. 3, secs. 799a, 799b and 799c.
The county requested appellee to perform the services and furnish the materials, compensation for which is sued for herein; that he complied is not denied. A transaction was thus established, purporting to be an agreement, and apparently binding, to pay to appellee the reasonable value of such materials and services. Appellant could not question this apparently binding contract on the ground of illegality, that is, the absence of a prior appropriation, except by specially pleading and proving such defense. ‘ ‘ The rule is well settled, in strict accordance with the true theory of pleading under the codes, that all defenses based upon the asserted illegality of the contract in
If this were a defense — which we do not here decide — it could be availed of only by appellant pleading it. This it failed to do.
c. Appellant further contends that its right of cross-examination was erroneously and to its prejudice limited.
As stated, appellee was suing to recover reasonable compensation for services performed and materials furnished. Near one-half the amount involved was claimed to be due for job work; the reasonable value of which depended largely upon the cost and value of the labor and material which went into the work. His witness and employe, Rogers, gave his opinion of the reasonable value of the work done. In the course of the cross-examination the following appears:
‘ ‘ Q. What do you base that value on ?
“A. On the amount of work and stock.
‘ ‘ Q. How much work did it take to set it up and print those ballots ?
“Objection sustained and exception.
“Q. How much material did it take--value of material?
“Objection sustained and exception.”
Other questions in the same line were propounded, and objections thereto sustained. Counsel was entitled to develop fully by cross-examination
In Rio Grande County v. Bloom, 14 Colo. App. 194, 59 Pac. 417, plaintiff sued upon a cause of action similar to that here involved. The court, in the course of its opinion, says: ‘ ‘ There was an attempt to cross-examine the plaintiff * * * respecting the subject-matter of his hill, and many questions were put to him directly to the point of the cost and value of the labor and material which went into the publication * * * Defendant’s counsel were not permitted to pursue this line of cross-examination, and in this we think the court very clearly erred. ’ ’
The plaintiff and the witness Rogers were the only witnesses of plaintiff below going to the question of the compensation sued for. The matter above excluded was not otherwise supplied by Rogers. We cannot say that appellant was not prejudiced by the improper exclusion of the above testimony. For this reason the case must he reversed. All questions have been reviewed which will probably he of service in a new trial, should one he had. Judgment reversed.
Reversed.