60 So. 426 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1912
Suit was filed in the court below by the appellee to recover on the common counts from the appellant, a municipal corporation, for certain electrical fixtures furnished by the appellee to the appellant to be used in connection with the work of remodeling the building known as the “City Hall of Mobile.” The defendant filed a plea of the general issue. The errors assigned are the refusal of the court to give the general charge in behalf of the defendant, requested by it in writing; and giving that part of the oral charge of the court in which the court charged the jury that the plaintiff under certain conditions could recover, if at all, on an implied contract.
The evidence introduced in behalf of the plaintiff tended to show that the plaintiff company was a corporation engaged in the general electric supply business in the city of Mobile, Ala., and furnished and installed the electrical fixtures for the City Hall of Mobile at the time the building was remodeled; that the plaintiff company dealt with and extended credit in the transaction solely to the city authorities, regarding them as acting for the city, and did not know in the transaction one Chamblin, a contractor in charge of the work of remodeling under a general contract with the city, and had no notice and nothing to put it on notice of the contract between Chamblin and the city, under the terms of which contract the city claimed Chamblin was to pay for the electrical fixtures to be used in remodeling the City Hall building.
The evidence introduced by the defendant did not show actual notice to the plaintiff of the contract between Chamblin and the city, and had but slight
It appeared from the evidence without conflict that the plaintiff furnished the fixtures in controversy; that they were reasonably worth the amount claimed and for which judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant; that the president of the plaintiff conducted the negotiations looking to the selection and installation of the fixtures solely with the city authorities; that the municipality accepted and retained the fixtures, refusing to pay for or return them upon demands made by the plaintiff.
The contention of the appellant primarily is that the contractor, Chamblin, was required, under the terms and conditions of his contract with the city for remodeling the building, to supply these fixtures and that consequently no responsibility or liability rests upon the city in the premises. It was also the appellant’s contention in this connection in the trial court that the plaintiff had notice of the contract, or of facts that would reasonable put it on notice. The other propositions mainly contended for by appellant are that the mayor and building committee were without authority to bind the municipality, and that the appellee could not recover on an implied contract under the facts in the case. The contract and attached specifications between the city and Chamblin, the general contractor-, were introduced in evidence on the trial and are set out in the bill of exceptions; but whether or not by its terms the contractor is required to furnish the electrical fixtures, and the amount specified to be paid for them is included in the contract price to be paid by the municipality to
Assuming that the contract required the general contractor to furnish the fixtures and that they were covered by and to be paid for out of the contract price to be paid Ohamblin by the city under the contract between them, yet if the plaintiff, not being a party to that contract and with no knowledge or notice of it, through bona fide negotiations had with the mayor and building committee of the aldermanic board, did, as a matter of fact, furnish the fixtures to the city on its sole responsibility, and the city accepted, retained, and used the fixtures so furnished by the plaintiff and refused to return or pay for them on proper demand made, the city would nevertheless be liable to the plaintiff for the reasonable value of the fixtures under an implied contract.
Even if it be true that the plaintiff could not recover on a. contract because the city authorities with whom it dealt were not authorized to bind the municipality, and the aldermanic board as such, which only would have been authorized to bind the city, did not act in the premises, yet the plaintiff would not for these reasons be without a remedy and would not be precluded from a recovery in an action of assumpsit of the reasonable value of the fixtures on an implied contract.— Brush Electric Light & Power Co. v. City Council of Montgomery, 114 Ala. 433, 21 South. 960.
Although the officers or agents of a municipality ordering and accepting goods for the municipality are not acting within the scope of their authority and are not authorized to enter into a contract binding upon the city, if the property thus acquired is retained by the municipality for municipal uses, and the contract is merely void as distinguished from illegal, a recovery
Appellant’s counsel calls attention to the fact that the form of action in the recent case decided by the Supreme Court, General Elec. Co. v. Fort Deposit, supra, was in detinue, and makes the claim that the only remedy is to recover the property thus acquired and used by the municipality. This is untenable. The right to recover on the implied contract is based on the contract that the law makes between the parties implying a promise to pay a reasonable compensation for the property retained to the use and benefit of the municipality. Restitution of the property itself may he enforced in a proper case, but the right to recover the property is not exclusive. The reason for the rule requiring restitution of the property, or reasonable compensation to be made therefor, rests alike upon the same broad doctrine and principle of primary justice that the property of one may not be used and enjoyed by another- without compensation.
The evidence in this case- was amply sufficient to submit to the jury the plaintiff’s right to recover on an implied contract, and the court properly refused to give the general charge requested by the defendant. That part of the charge of the court to which an exception was reserved, instructing the jury that the plaintiff could recover, if at all, upon an implied contract, when taken and construed in connection with the entire
Affirmed.