1. If Knickerbocker hired the plaintiff to grade a part of the municipal golf course either in an individual capacity or as agent for other private or civic associations interested in the project this would place no liability on the city,
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but the evidence on this point is contradicted and the verdict shows that the jury necessarily found, as the plaintiff testified, that Knickerbocker was acting “as mayor” in contracting with him. The contract was invalid, as the plaintiff recognizes by bringing an action on quantum meruit, and the only question of law left in the case is whether the city could and did ratify the acts and receive a benefit from them so as to be liable for their reasonable value. Obviously, the benefit was received. There is no contention but that the plaintiff’s work which involved leveling a hill was necessary to the creation of the municipal golf course. There is no doubt that Knickerbocker and Thurmond, as a majority of the city commissioners, could have entered into a legal contract with the plaintiff for this work in such manner as to bind the city, and there is no dispute that both of them were thoroughly conversant with the work being done over a period of more than six weeks, and that the city received and retained the benefits derived from it. Where, because of a constitutional or statutory inhibition or because the power to enter into a certain type of contract is not included in that granted to a governmental body, an attempt by such body to make the contract is not only ineffective at the time but it cannot subsequently be ratified by retention and use of the benefits so procured. Persons dealing with governmental bodies are presumed to know the extent of the latters’ authority, and “an implied contract will not arise where an express contract is unauthorized by law.”
Decatur County v. Roberts,
Judgment affirmed.
