322 Mass. 171 | Mass. | 1947
The plaintiff brings this bill in equity under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231 A, inserted by St. 1945, c. 582, § 1, seeking an adjudication as to the validity of a written contract for the construction of a pipe line to be used in connection with the water system of the defendant city of Springfield. The contract, entitled “Little River Water Supply Contract No. 19 Transmission Main,” bears date of July 1 1946, and is signed by the plaintiff and by the defendants Wallace and McQuade, constituting a majority of the board of water commissioners of the city. It has not been signed by the defendant mayor, who is the third member of the board. The judge ruled the contract to be invalid without the mayor’s signature. From a final decree dismissing the bill, the plaintiff and the defendants Wallace and McQuade appealed. The case is here with report of the evidence.
■ The underlying question is whether contracts of the board of water commissioners are subject to the following provisions of the revised ordinances: Chapter 2, § 83. “In all cases where the amount of any contract made with the city . . . shall exceed one thousand dollars, the contract shall be in writing, shall be approved by the city auditor as to available appropriation, and shall be signed by the mayor and a majority of the committee, commission or board, in charge of the work on the part of the city, and after being signed by the parties, no such contract shall be altered in any particular unless a majority of said committee, commission or board shall signify their assent thereto in writing, under their respective signatures, indorsed on said contract, and approved by the mayor.” Chapter 1, § 15. “All deeds, conveyances, leases and other instruments, which shall be given by the city, and which to be valid in law must be signed, sealed and acknowledged, shall be signed and acknowledged by the mayor, on behalf of the city, and shall be by him sealed with the common seal of the city.”
When the city was incorporated (see St. 1852, c. 94), the water supply was in the charge of a private company. See St. 1848, c. 303; St. 1850, c. 192. By St. 1864, c. 165, the
We think that it is clear that the Legislature in creating the present board of water commissioners has not shown an intent that the exercise of its functions might be controlled by ordinances (other than those permitted by St. 1880, c. 30, § 4), and in particular has not authorized the subjection of the board to what in practical effect would be a
There is no merit in the contention that the ordinance requiring the mayor’s signature to contracts is applicable to contracts of the water board under the power to “prescribe the mode ... of the payment of all bills contracted by said department” contained in St. 1880, c. 30, § 4.
The city and the mayor rely principally upon Mayor of Haverhill v. Water Commissioners of Haverhill, 320 Mass. 63. That case, however, is not in point, because it dealt with the effect not of an ordinance, but of a statute of statewide application to municipalities to which, it was held, the Haverhill water commissioners were subject. We state parenthetically that the precise question there presented, namely, whether the city treasurer was entitled to receive the water receipts, could not arise in the case of Springfield, where, unlike the case of Haverhill, the statute creating the water board expressly provides that the city treasurer shall' control those funds. St. 1880, c. 30, § 4. The decisive matter here is not whether, as happens to be the case with the respective statutes relating to Springfield and Haverhill, the Legislature has described the water board as a department of the city, but that there is no act enabling the city council of Springfield to impose upon the water board these ordinances restricting its management and operation.
■ Certain cases relied upon by the city and the mayor are
The ordinances in question being inapplicable, there is nothing requiring the signature of the mayor to give validity to the contract. By St. 1880, c. 30, § 2, the board acquired “all the rights, powers and duties” of the predecessor board under St. 1872, c. 345, § 5, which provided that “a majority of said commissioners shall be a quorum for the exercise of the powers and duties prescribed by this act.” Compare G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 4, § 6, Fifth.
Two minor objections remain for consideration. One is that, after the plaintiff’s bid was submitted and before the contract was executed, the water board allowed the plaintiff to strike out a so called “escalator clause,” or condition accompanying its bid, reading, “This bid is made subject to change in case of increased cost in labor or material.” The other objection is that at the same time the plaintiff was allowed to correct an absurd series of mathematical errors, wherein it had written in words in many items of its bid the total cost as the unit cost, accompanied in each case by the correct unit cost in figures. For example, item 9 of the bid read, “For furnishing and laying 48-inch steel pipe, the sum of Six Hundred Ninety-Nine Thousand & Three Hundred dollars and no cents ($27.00) per lineal foot.” In the information for bidders it was stated, “In case of discrepancy between the words and the numerals, the words shall govern.”
The short answer to these objections is that, unlike Conners v. Lowell, 246 Mass. 279, there was no statutory limitation on the method of awarding such a contract by the water board. See Mayor v. County Commissioners of Hampden, 141 Mass. 74; Slocum v. Medford, 302 Mass. 251,
The final decree is reversed, with costs in this court to the appealing parties. A decree is to be entered adjudging that the contract bearing the signatures of two water commissioners, constituting a majority of the board, is valid. As the bill contains prayers for payment for work performed and for damages for breach of contract, which the plaintiff still insists upon, the ease is to be further heard in the Superior Court.
So ordered.