33 Ind. App. 521 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1904
Suit by appellee, an abutting property owner, against appellant city and a contractor, to enjoin the carrying out of a contract for a street improvement. Demurrers to each of the two paragraphs of complaint were overruled, and, appellants refusing to plead further, the court rendered judgment against them for costs; and decreed a perpetual injunction.
It is first argued that this is a collateral attack, and can not be'sustained unless the proceedings are void for‘want of jurisdiction, and that, as a remedy by remonstrance and also by appeal is given, injunction will not lie.
The. authority to assess abutting property for a street improvement is purely statutory, and such statutes are to be strictly construed. The manner in which the statute provides the assessment shall be made is the measure of the city’s power to make it. "Whether this power has been exercised as the statute directs, presents a question in its nature jurisdictional. If the municipality attempts some method other than that provided by the statute, or goes beyond the authority given, to that extent it is without jurisdiction and its acts are void. In such cases it is undertaking the exercise of an unauthorized power which equity will enjoin. If mandatory provisions of the statute or charter have been disregarded in an ordinance, and a contract beyond the scope of municipal power entered into, the ordinance and contract are illegal, and an assessment made upon property through such proceedings would be illegal. It can not be said that the remedy at law' in such cases is as (adequate or efficient as the remedy by injunction. It has been held, time and time again, that statutes granting a municipality power to impose a burden upon private property, and requiring the doing of some particular thing, in its nature jurisdictional, as a condition precedent to the right to impose such burden, the failure to do the thing required renders the proceeding void. If the act of the
In Watson v. Sutherland, 5 Wall. 74, 18 L. Ed. 580, the rule is stated: “It is not enough that there is a remedy at law; it must be.plain and adequate, or in other words, as practical and efficient to the ends of justice, and its prompt administration, as the remedy in equity.” This principle has been approved in this State in a number of cases. See Hart v. Hildebrandt, 30 Ind. App. 415, and cases cited; Meyer v. Town of Boonville, 162 Ind. 165; Dillon, Mun. Corp. (4th ed.), §914.
It is no longer necessary. in this State that a plaintiff should show by averment and proof that he will suffer irreparable injury. In Pomeroy, Eq. Jurisp. (2d ed.), §1357, the author says: “Judges have been brought to see and to acknowledge — contrary to the opinion held by Chancelor Kent — that the common law theory of’ not interfering with persons until they shall have actually committed a wrong is fundamentally erroneous, and that a remedy which prevents a threatened wrong is in its essential nature better than a remedy which permits the wrong to be done, and then attempts to pay for it by the pecuniary damages
The proceedings of the council leading up to and including the contract are questioned first upon the ground that the declaratory resolution and "notice for bids failed to specify the kind of improvement and invite competitive bidding thereon. In the original resolution, and in the notice inviting bids, the street was to be improved by paving the roadway between the curbs with either sheet asphalt pavement upon a concrete foundation, or brick paving blocks upon a concrete foundation, or with bituminous macadam, as the council should determine after receiving the bids. The statute provides that the common council, desiring to make a street improvement, “shall order the same by the adoption of a resolution declaring such improvement to be necessary and stating the kind, size, location and terminal points thereof and fixing a date upon which bids will be received for the construction of said improvement.” It is further provided that the council shall open the bids upon the date fixed and award- the contract, that it may take the bids under advisement, and may reject any and all bids, and that any property owner whose lands shall be assessed for the improvement may remonstrate “against said.improvement at any time before the letting of the contract,” and if the remonstrance “is signed by two-thirds of the property owners, residing upon the lots abutting on such improvement, and representing two-thirds of the number of lineal feet of such improvement, then all further proceedings shall be abandoned.” Acts 1901, p. 534, §3623a Burns 1901.
This statute manifestly was intended to and does curtail the power formerly given to city councils in making street improvements on their own motion. For the first time abutting property owners who are to pay for the improvement are given the right to defeat the kind of improvement
If the council may designate more than one kind of improvement, it may designate all kinds. We do not think it can be said that the competitive bidding contemplated by the statute would necessarily be secured where bids are invited on various kinds of improvements. In such a case the bidders would not be put on terms of perfect equality, because they would not be bidding on the' same proposition on the same terms. It is true, the contract is to be let to the best bidder, not necessarily the lowest, but the bid accepted is to be the best bid, not merely for the improvement of the street but the best bid for improving the street in the manner already designated, by the council. Such a plan could result in injury to the property holder.
In Wickwire v. City of Elkhart, 144 Ind. 305, the court approved the following: “It is, however, the duty of the courts to resolve doubts against the validity of the exercise of the authority wherever there is any substantial deviation at all, and to sustain proceedings in cases where there is not an exact compliance with the statute
In City of Connersville v. Merrill, 14 Ind. App. 303, cited by counsel for appellant, the general character of the walk was to be of stone, and bids were invited on three different kinds of stone. One set of specifications would no doubt have been sufficient. The only question raised was as to the uncertainty with reference to the bidding, and it was there held that the property holder “had the benefit of competition on each brand or special kind of the general material to be used.” This language, we think, distinguishes that ease from the case at bar, where there was no general material specified, but the materials in the kinds of improvement designated Were entirely different. Moreover, the act of 1901, supra, gives the landholder a right with reference to the kind of improvement which he did not have under the act in force in the above case, and the statute should be construed to make this new right effective.
The proceedings of the council are questioned also on the ground that certain powers and duties were unlawfully delegated to the city civil engineer. In the specifications for a bituminous macadam street, which specifications are made a part of the contract entered into for the improvement, it is provided, among other things, that on top of a certain foundation “shall be sprinkled a thin layer of Warren’s No. 1 semi-liquid composition, same to he fluid
The statute gives to the engineer no authority whatever to determine the character, of the improvement, or to determine the materials to be used. He prepares plans and specifications for public improvements when directed to do so by the council (§3508 Burns 1901), but these plans and specifications become a part of the contract which the city makes for the improvement, and are with reference to the kind of improvement and materials to be Used as determined by the council. It' .is not a delegation of power to leave to tire engineer the execution of a work which the council has ordered to be done in a particular way. But the power to determine that an improvement shall be made, or the manner in which it shall be made, is a public power conferred by the legislature on the legislative department of the municipal government, and can not be delegated to any officer or any other department, but must be exercised, in strict conformity with the statute conferring the power. The legislature evidently intended to place the responsibility of determining the plan of the improvement upon the common council. As the expenses of the improvement are to be paid by the property owners, the power to make the improvement is a power of taxation, and a court is not authorized to say that such sovereign authority may be exercised by any officer or officers except those whom the statute in terms designates. The council was without authority to delegate to the engineer the power to select any of the materials to be used in making the improvement, but it attempted to do this when if delegated to him the power to order used at his discretion these various Warren’s
Nor is there any authority for giving the engineer a voice in the letting of the contract. The statute plainly directs that when the bids are received the council shall let the contract to the best bidder. Selecting the kind of material to be used can not be said to be a matter of detail which may be left to the engineer, nor can it be said that selecting the material is a ministerial duty. In Smith v. Duncan, 77 Ind. 92, an ordinance provided that a pavement should be of wooden blocks, “but,” said the court, “of what wood the blocks shall be, how they shall be laid, to what grade, and every minutia of the work, is left to be determined by the engineer. The law does not contemplate the delegation of such powers to that officer.” See Thompson v. Schermerhorn, 6 N. Y. 92, 55 Am. Dec. 385; California Improv. Co. v. Reynolds, 123 Cal. 88, 55 Pac. 802; Hydes v. Joyes, 4 Bush (Ky.) 464, 96 Am. Dec. 311; McCrowell v. City of Bristol, 89 Va. 652, 16 S. E. 867, 20 L. R. A. 653; Bolton v. Gilleran, 105 Cal. 244, 38 Pac. 881, 45 Am. St. 33; City of St. Louis v. Clemens, 43 Mo. 395; Birdsall v. Clark, 73 N. Y. 73, 29 Am. Rep. 105; City of Indianapolis v. Lawyer, 38 Ind. 348; Dillon, Mun. Corp. (4th ed.), §§96, 779; Smith, Mun. Corp., §564.
In Hitchcock v. Galveston, 96 U. S. 341, 24 L. Ed. 659, the council directed the pavements to be constructed of one or the other of several materials, and gave abutting lot owners the privilege of selecting the kind, and reserving to the chairman of their committee authority to select in case the lot owners failed. The council having provided for the work and for the bidding, the execution of a contract on behalf of the city for doing the work Was a ministerial act which the council might direct should be performed by the mayor and chairman of the committee on streets and
Counsel cite also the case of Mayor, etc., v. Stewart, 92 Md. 535, 48 Atl. 165, where the council had selected asphalt as the material with which the street was to be paved, and permitted the engineer to use vitrified brick in lieu of asphalt in the gutters, and upon such other portions of the street as in his judgment might be necessary or advisable ; but the council had designated both materials by ordinance, and the only discretion given the engineer was to use one in preference to the other at particular places. In that case it is held that “the power to determine what material should be used in paving a street is a legislative power, and can not be transferred by the city council to anyone else.” In the case at bar we do not think it can be said that the discretion given-the engineer was, “with respect to the details of doing the work, ‘necessary discretion in a workman employed to do a work,’ ” as stated in the above case;
In Ray v. City of Jeffersonville, 90 Ind. 567, the statute expressly imposed upon the engineer the duty of making the assessments in certain cases, and the case is to be distinguished from the case of Smith v. Duncan, 77 Ind. 92. In Taber v. Grafmiller, 109 Ind. 206, the council ordered that certain sidewalks “be graded to a width of ten feet, and paved with brick to a width of six feet,” and that said improvement shall be made under the supervision and to the satisfaction of the city civil engineer, and in accordance with plans and specifications” on file in the engineer’s office, and that the engineer should set the proper stakes. It was held there was no delegation of authority, that there was a “specification of the nature of the work,” that the resolution clearly implied that there was an exist
In Swift v. City of St. Louis (Mo.), 79 S. W. 172, the board of public improvements gave notice that on a certain day it would consider the improvement of a street with either one of four kinds of material specified, and after-wards reconpnended to the municipal assembly an ordinance for the improvement with bituminous macadam. A contract was made under the ordinance. The specifications of material to be used were certain compositions known as Warren’s Puritan Brands, but no power was given the engineer in that case to use any other composition which he might think equally as good.
We think the proceedings of the council were invalid because of the failure of the resolution and notice to specify the kind of improvement contemplated, and because certain powers were unlawfully delegated to the civil engineer.
Judgment affirmed.