24 Or. 188 | Or. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court:
The plaintiff claims that it was and is the duty of the defendant city to collect from the various owners of property abutting upon said Twelfth Street the several sums ascertained by the defendant to be the cost of making said improvement, and the charges specifically made against the various parcels of land affected by and liable for said improvement; that the defendant has wholly failed and neglected to perform this duty, and has not collected from the property holders the money with which to pay the warrants described, and is making no effort so to do;
Under its charter the city is invested with the power to order local improvements, and afforded the means to raise the necessary funds to pay for them by assessments upon the property benefited thereby. When the city orders a local improvement, the duty devolves upon it to put the necessary machinery in motion to raise the funds to pay for it by assessments upon the property affected. This duty devolved upon the city when it ordered the improvement of Twelfth Street, so that when the defendant entered into a contract for doing the work, and the contractor stipulated to look for payment to the special fund to be raised by assessments, the obligation rested upon the city to prosecute in good faith, and with reasonable diligence, the means afforded to it, under its charter, to raise and collect the fund necessary to redeem its obligation. There is no pretense but that the obligation resting upon the contractor to perform the work, and furnish the materials required, has been satisfactorily performed, and the improvement accepted. Having performed his obligation the duty rested upon the city to discharge its obligation. “When the contractor,” says Huger, C. J., “ had performed his work according to his contract, he had no duty remaining to discharge, and then had a right to rely upon the implied obligation of the city to use with due diligence its own agencies in procuring the means to satisfy his claims. It could not have been supposed that he was not only to earn his compensaticñ, but also to set in motion and keep in operation the several agencies of the city government, over which he had no control, to place in the hands of the city the funds necessary to enable it to pay its obligation. That was a power lodged in the hands of the city, and the clear intent of the contract
In North Pacific Lumber Co. v. East Portland, 14 Or. 6 (12 Pac. Rep. 4), Thayer, J., says: “The improvement is supposed to be a benefit to the lot owners referred to, and the lots affected are charged with the cost of making it. The city occupies the relation in the proceeding more of an agent than a principal. It does not undertake to pay the contract price for making the improvement out of the general funds of the city. I do not think it has any power to enter into such an agreement for the improvement of the city, but it does undertake to perform all the acts required by the charter intended to supply the requisite fund to defray the expenses attending it, and a failure to comply with any of the requirements of the charter by which the funds may be realized would subject it to a general liability.” The distinction which is sought to be made between that case and the case at bar is not tenable. The stipulation of the contractor to look to a
In Cummings v. The Mayor, 11 Paige, 596, it was held that it was the duty of the officers of the corporation to see that a proper assessment for the improvement was made, and that the money was collected thereon, and paid over to the contractor within a reasonable time after the completion of the improvement; and that, as the officers of the corporation had unreasonably neglected to compel a proper assessment to be made, the complainants were entitled to payment out of the general fund of the corporation. This case was approved and followed in Baldwin v. City of Oswego, 1 Abb. Dec. 62, in which the defendant
The theory is that when the municipality passes an ordinance for a local improvement, it is its duty to prosecute with diligence the means afforded to it under its charter to realize the fund to pay for such improvement