265 N.W. 58 | Minn. | 1936
Plaintiff is a city of the fourth class under a home rule charter. December 14, 1928, it contracted with defendant for the purchase, during a period of ten years, of electric power for the operation of its municipal plant. That contract, now having but three years (five years when the action was started) to run, the city wants to avoid. It was found invalid, for failure to comply with certain provisions of plaintiff's charter.
Whether the trial court was right in holding that 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, §§ 1764-1765, did not supersede the applicable charter provisions will not be decided. It is enough that plaintiff was authorized to make contracts for the purchase of electricity. Guth v. City of Staples,
There is no claim of unfairness or improvidence, or suggestion of such illegality of consideration as appeared in Goodrich v. N.W. Tel. Exch. Co.
1. In this state it is settled law that in providing water and electricity for its inhabitants a municipality acts in its proprietary capacity. Reed v. City of Anoka,
That is about enough to decide the case. An individual occupying the same relative status as does plaintiff in respect to defendant would have so little chance of avoiding a ten-year contract which it had performed, and performance of which by the other party it had accepted, for five years, that no well advised attorney would even suggest that the attempt be made, where the only question was as to the authority of some agent to make the contract. For obvious reasons, there is an estoppel to question the agent's authority if the bargain itself is confirmed by five years of open-eyed and *306 unquestioning performance, and acceptance of performance, by the principal.
2. Under the rule of Tracy C. T. Co. v. City of Tracy,
Exactly in point are Mayor and Council of Hagerstown v. Hagerstown Ry. Co.
The argument for the city would doubtless prevail were the contract still wholly executory. Broderick v. City of St. Paul,
3. Charter provisions such as those now invoked cannot repeal inconsistent statutory law. No more can they abrogate applicable rules of common law or equity such as those of estoppel and laches. Laird Norton Yards v. City of Rochester,
This is not a case such as some wherein a contract has been held void or unenforceable and yet recovery has been allowed,quasi ex contractu, for benefit conferred, as was done in First Nat. Bank of Goodhue v. Village of Goodhue,
The judgment must be reversed with directions to amend the findings of fact and conclusions of law in accord with the views herein expressed. The result will be judgment for defendant confirming the contract.
So ordered.