33 Wis. 2d 294 | Wis. | 1967
The sole issue presented by this appeal is: Did the failure of the district to finish the work by asking for bids under sec. 89.48, Stats., excuse the bonding company and the contractor from all liability resulting from breach of contract and abandonment of the work?
Sec. 89.48, Stats., provides as follows:
“(1) In all cases where the work to be done at any time under the direction of the commissioners shall in their opinion cost to exceed two thousand dollars unless the court has authorized the district itself to do the work the commissioners shall advertise for bids on such work in some newspaper published in the county in which the petition is filed ....
“ (2) Such work shall be let to the lowest responsible bidder ....”1
The trial judge found that the district had not complied with this statute in reletting the remaining work under the original contract with Cacic. It also found that this failure excused the liability of the contractor and
The basic purpose of the statute is not to protect sureties. Rather, it is to protect the public from paying what may be uncompetitive prices for public work.
Capitol seeks to avoid all liability by failure of the district to comply with the bidding statute. Thus, it seeks to void its obligation under the first contract by illegal procedure alleged to void the second. The general rule is that
“. . . where the contract in question is ultra vires merely in the secondary sense of the term, namely, not expressly prohibited to it, but beyond the scope of the general powers conferred upon it, or, at least, while within the general powers of the municipality, is not entered into in strict compliance with the conditions prescribed by the charter or statute for its validity, the other party to the contract who has received its benefits cannot defeat its enforcement by the municipality by pleading the defense of ultra vires.”2
The rationale behind this rule is that the defense of ultra vires in the secondary sense is created for the benefit of the municipality which has suffered an injury by reason of such unauthorized contract in order to protect the taxpayers and the municipality from the effects of such a contract. Only the municipality or taxpayers representing the municipality may, therefore, invoke the defense. Thus, in Madison v. American Sanitary Engineering Co.
“Those cases lay down the principle that contracts binding a municipality can be culminated only in the manner prescribed by the charter, and municipal officers must follow the prescribed procedure step by step. This doctrine has been applied, however, only for the protection of taxpayers whose money is about to be spent, or property owners whose land is about to be charged, by reason of the illegal contract. It is just as clearly established by the decisions of this court that persons who enter into a contract with the city stand in a different position. Such persons ‘cannot even make the defense of ultra vires or total lack of power on the part of the corporation to make the contract. If the defense of ultra vires cannot be made, it is very evident that the lesser claim . . . must also be ineffective.’ Ricketson v. Milwaukee, 105 Wis. 591, 81 N. W. 864. See, also, Beloit v. Heineman, 128 Wis. 398, 107 N. W. 334; Price Co. v. Northwestern C. & S. Co., 184 Wis. 279, 199 N. W. 60. The limitations upon the authority of municipal officers to enter into contracts, and prescribed methods for the exercise of such power, are for the protection of the public, and such provisions will not be permitted to be invoked to the harm of the public by those who, having capacity to contract for themselves, have in form entered into contractual relations with a municipality. In other words, a law intended as a shield for the public will not be permitted to be used as an instrument for its destruction.” (Emphasis added.)5
Since neither the surety nor the contractor could make such a contention as to the original contract, there should be no reason why they should have the authority to challenge the reletting contract on this basis. This is particularly true in view of the fact that the purpose of the statute is to protect the taxpayers. Application of the statute to protect the surety in the case at bar would only hurt the taxpayers because the surety escapes liability.
The general rule is that a compensated surety is an insurer and its obligation is to be strictly construed.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed.
Sec. 89.48 (1) and (2), Stats., has become embodied in sec. 88.62 (1). This change was made by ch. 252, sec. 158, Laws of 1965.
Anno. 122 A. L. R. 1370, 1372. See also 38 Am. Jur., Municipal Corporations, p. 181, sec. 505.
(1903), 118 Wis. 480, 95 N. W. 1097.
(1925), 187 Wis. 506, 204 N. W. 907.
Id. at page 521.
In Trustees of Sanitary District of Chicago v. Poe (1921), 138 Md. 541, 114 Atl. 714, the sanitary district completed the work itself and there was no reletting. In Wykoff v. Stewart (1917), 180 Iowa 949, 164 N. W. 122, the contract was relet by advertisement. The work was also properly relet in Board of Drainage Commissioners v. H. J. Peterson & Co. (1922), 196 Ky. 130, 244 S. W. 322. Respondent completely misses the point in citing Central Lime & Cement Co. v. Leyden-Ortseifen Co. (1927), 245 Ill. App. 48. In this case the district breached the contract by a wrongful termination. The court held that any reletting of the work was also wrongful and the cost of this reletting could not be charged against money owed to the contractor. In conclusion, in none of these cases was the surety using wrongful reletting as an absolute defense to liability under the original contract.
72 C. J. S., Principal and Surety, p. 583, sec. 102; 94 A. L. R. 876.