213 Mo. 22 | Mo. | 1908
This is an action to recover $6,375, the contract price for printing the “Mayor’s Message and Accompanying Documents,” pursuant to a contract between the Con P. Curran Printing Company and the city of St. Louis, made November 25, 1902, under the provisions of article 15 of the charter and chapter 26 of the General Ordinances, 1907, of the city of St. Louis.
The register of the city of St. Louis has general supervision of and executes all contracts for the public printing of that city.. Section 2 of article fifteen
On September 27, 1902, a resolution was passed by the council of the city of St. Louis, which was concurred in on October 6,1902, by the house of delegates, .by which it was ordered that one thousand copies of the “Mayor’s message and accompanying documents” be printed in book and pamphlet form. At this time, Mr. Patrick R. Fitzgibbon was the city register, and Mr. James Y. Player was the city comptroller. Under the direction of this resolution, the register proceeded, on November 10th, to advertise, in due form, for bids for printing the documents referred to in the resolution. In this advertisement, the register reserved the right to reject any and all bids. The notice to bidders also provided that : “A bond of five thousand dollars,
The comptroller of the city in his annual estimate required by section 20 of article 4 of the charter of the amounts to be appropriated for various items of municipal expenditures submitted to the municipal assembly among other things the following: “Printing the stationery for mayor, comptroller, auditor, register and treasurer, mayor’s message and accompanying documents, $5,000; advertising ordinances, etc., books, blanks, printing and stationery, etc., printing and reprinting ordinances, vehicle numbers and dog checks, $28,000; total $33,000.” The municipal assembly passed the following ordinance, No. 20756, which was duly approved by the mayor, July 2, 1902, entitled, “An ordinance making appropriations to meet certain expenses of the city government for the fiscal year beginning April 8, 1902, and ending April 13, 1903, in-eluding bills unpaid at the beginning of the fiscal year, and transferring certain amounts of temporary appropriations back to their respective revenues.” In said ordinance it is provided, “There is hereby appropriated and set apart out of municipal revenue the amounts and for the purpose as hereinafter specified to cover expenditures of the current fiscal year, including bills unpaid at the beginning of the fiscal year, namely: Printing and stationery; for mayor, comptroller, auditor, register and treasurer, $33,000.”
Having caused the mayor to withhold his approval of the bond by the statement which he had made, to-wit, that the price in the contract was in excess of the appropriation, Mr. Player proceeded to take a pen and draw a line through his counter-signature on the contract. He did this with the intention of withdrawing
On the part of the city it is insisted that the judgment of the circuit court was erroneous, first, because the remedy resorted to is not available upon plaintiff’s own theory, but the action should have been by mandamus. Second, that there was no contract, because the mayor never did approve the bond and because the comptroller did not countersign the contract. Third, there was no appropriation and without which it was not competent to bind the city; and, fourth, because there was no delivery of the alleged infract.
We fully agree with the City Counselor that the countersigning of a contract of this character by the City' Comptroller is not a mere perfunctory matter and that the Comptroller is not a.mere figurehead. It was and is his duty to preserve the credit of the city and to see that the disbursements do not exceed the lawful appropriations made therefor, and hence he
II. But notwithstanding the fact that the contract itself had been let and executed in strict compliance
The ordinance making the appropriation for that year appropriated and set apart for “printing stationery for Mayor, Comptroller, Auditor, Register and Treasurer” $33,000. It is insisted by the learned City Counselor that because the Comptroller in his estimate of funds required for the fiscal years 1902 and 1903, recommended $5,000' for the printing and stationery for the Mayor, Comptroller, Auditor, Register and Treasurer and Mayor’s message and accompanying documents, therefore, the contract for printing the Mayor’s message exceeded the amount appropriated for that specific purpose. "We are entirely unable to concur in this view. It is admitted that there was at the time this action was brought an unexpended balance of $10,000 in the treasury of moneys appropriated for printing and stationery. While, of course, the Municipal Assembly must pass an ordinance making an appropriation of public money before any contract can be made, which will require the expenditure of such money, we think that the ordinance making the appropriation for the fiscal year of 1902 and 1903 whereby $33,000 was appropriated for printing and stationery for the Mayor, Comptroller, Auditor, Register and Treasurer was as specific as the nature of the subject required, so that the objection which the Comptroller and the Mayor urged against the approval of the bond was, we think, without any foundation in
Conceding as we do that the ordinance imposed on the plaintiff the duty of tendering a good and sufficient bond in the penal sum of $5,000' for the faithful performance of its contract with the city to furnish the printed pamphlets containing the Mayor’s message and accompanying documents, we think a fair construction of that ordinance also as plainly required the Mayor, when such a bond was tendered to him under the facts developed in this case, to approve the same. These were mutual obligations upon the plain
Finally, it is contended that plaintiff’s only remedy was to compel the Mayor by mandamus to approve the bond. But under the admitted facts of this case, we do not think this position is tenable. In State ex