55 F.2d 810 | 5th Cir. | 1932
This appeal results from the instruction of a verdict against the city of St. Peters-burg, Fla., in favor of Henry Meyers for a balance claimed under a contract to improve the city’s waterfront. The errors assigned relate to striking on demurrer certain pleas of the city, the rejection of evidence offered by it, and the instruction of the verdict. Meyers sued in three counts: The first a special count on his written contract alleging performance and a balance due; the second a common count for work done and materials furnished; and the third a common count for money due on an account stated. The trial developed without dispute that the special contract existed, had been performed, and that the balance duo on it had been stated. The contract was for the “dredging of two yacht basins and such other dredging as may be necessary to make the required fill shown in attached plan.” It bound the contractor “to dredge a turning basin and build and complete a good, firm, and substantial fill and breakwater in strict accordance with the plans, drawings, profiles and specifications.” The plans showed the two yacht basins and an estimate of 651,000' cubic yards for their excavation. The fill was shown as five neighboring sections requiring an estimated total of 1,300,000' cubic yards. These figures the contract stated to be mere estimates, and payment for the work was to be at a stated rate “for a cubic yard dredged from area indicated and deposited as shown on plans measured in place (fill measurement),” “Method of Measurement.- — The material removed will be measured by the cubic yard in place by means of soundings or cross-sections taken before tbe work starts and after completion of the filling. The attached plan * * * is believed to represent accurately the existing conditions. It will he verified and corrected if necessary by soundings taken shortly before dredging is begun. Monthly estimates will bo based on the surveys of the fill. As soon as practical after the completion of the entire work the area filled will he thoroughly examined by cross-sections and the final estimate will be made.” Kitchen, the city’s director of public works, was to be in charge of the work as engineer, and was given authority to “settle all disputes or questions of doubt that may arise as to the meaning of the plans or any clause of the specifications or method of doing the work.” Arbitration by three arbitrators was provided as to other matters. Monthly payments were to he made on the estimates of the engineer less 15 per cent., and full payment in ninety days after his final acceptance and estimate of the work. The contract does not provide that any estimate of the engineer shall he conclusive. No dispute exists about the dredging. Four of the five sections of the fill ran less than the original estimate. The fifth was estimated at 464,200 cubic yards, but was finally put at over 800',000 yards. A reduction of 34,000 yards was agreed to by the contractor and engineer, and a final estimate issued by the engineer which was accepted by tbe board of commissioners of the city, but not paid. In the light of these undisputed facts, we will examine the rulings complained of.
The second count for work- done and marterials furnished we will lay to one side as was done at the trial, because inconsistent with the special contract proved. We find no error in sustaining counts one and three against the demurrers thereto.
A plea of ultra vires, setting up the fact that a part of the fill was on land belonging to private citizens and the contract was therefore one to use the funds and credit of the city for the benefit of individuals contrary to the prohibition of the Constitution of Florida, art. 9, § 10, was properly stricken. The improvement of the city waterfront, the making of a harbor and a breakwater, with a public drive on the latter as shown by the plans, is upon its face a publie work. The city charter expressly gives power to construct and maintain ship channels, breakwaters, and drives, and to make contracts in connection therewith. Special Act 1913, c. 6772, § 2 (d). And again in section 24 power is given to compel the owners of low ground to fill or drain the same, and on default the city may fill at their expense, making the cost a lien on the property to- be enforced by assessment. The work proposed in this contract was within these powers of the
We have been referring to the first count on the special contract. The third count, which was upon an account stated, was met by the statutory general issue, “Never was indebted as alleged.” Comp. Gen. Laws Fla. 1927, § 4332, 4333, subd. 1. Special pleas claiming mistakes in the account in that the amount deposited in the fill was less than the amount stated because of duplications in the monthly estimates carried into the final estimate were stricken. An account stated anciently resulted when two merchants got together with their accounts, insimul eomputassent, and struck a balance; the law implying a promise, if not expressly made, that the balance would be paid. 3 Blk. Com. 162. Sometimes resort was had to equity to upset it for fraud or mistake, surcharging and falsification of the account being then in order. In modern times, an account stated arises from the mere rendering of an account of money transactions, with either a failure to object within a reasonable time, or an express approval by the other
In the trial, the plaintiff proved not only that there had been a final estimate for the amount sued for made by the engineer and accepted by the city, but also that the amount had been reached in the following way: The owners of the private property had objected to the amount proposed to be assessed on them as being erroneous, and the engineer had called in Col. Youngberg, another engineer, who, after some investigation, proposed a reduction of 34,000 yards. The engineer and the contractor agreed to the result, none of the board of commissioners being present. A final estimate was then presented to the board, and accepted by it under this statement: “Final estimate dredging fill on waterfront Sixth Avenue to Thirteenth Avenue, (Assessment fill). Mr. Kitchen explained the property owners objected to the amount of yardage; subsequently a complete cheek was made by Col. Young-berg, District Engineer, and he submitted a report substantiating the city’s measurements.” The District Judge was impressed that this was more than an account stated, and a compromise binding on all parties which could not be impeached unless for fraud, and he refused the offers of the city to prove that the computations under the surveys were erroneous and that the correction of the original profile by borings made since the fill as acted on by the engineer in making his final estimate was unreliable and mistaken, and that the true yardage was only what had been already paid for. The offers of proof were not very intelligibly made, but this was the intent of them. The plaintiff’s evidence did tend to show as between the engineer and contractor the compromise of a dispute by mutual concessions which constitute a consideration for the agreement. Hennessy v. Bacon, 137 U. S. 78, 11 S. Ct. 17, 34 L. Ed. 605. But a contract of compromise was not sued upon, nor did the act of the engineer in making one bind the city. His authority extended only to making a final estimate according to the city’s contract, and by no provision of that contract was his estimate made conclusive. The board of commissioners accepted the estimate made, thus admitting prima facie its correctness; but the proceedings before them do not indicate that they knew of any dispute with the contractor which had been compromised, or that with full knowledge they had ratified the compromise. They were told rather that a dispute with the property owners had been ended by upholding the city’s contention. It follows that the evidence offered to show the true indebtedness under the contract ought to have been admitted, and that issue submitted to the jury.
Interest was allowed against the city from September 6, 1927, a date ninety days after the final estimate, being the time fixed by the contract for final payment. Interest is not promised in the contract, and no statute of Florida provides for its payment by municipalities. Counties, as subdivisions of the state, are held not to owe interest not promised in their contracts. National Bank v. Duval County, 45 Fla. 496, 34 So. 894, 3 Ann. Cas. 457; Duval County v. Charleston Eng. & Const. Co. (Fla.) 134 So. 509, 512. This view has in some states been extended to municipalities, but more usually they are held on their business contracts to owe interest like private corporations. 2 Dillon
‘ Reversed and remanded.