Figone v. Repetti

104 P. 583 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1909

Lead Opinion

This is an appeal from an order refusing to grant an injunction, restraining the auditor of the city and county of San Francisco from auditing, and the treasurer of said city from paying, a claim of defendant Repetti for the removal of garbage and refuse from the public school buildings and grounds in said city for the month of October, 1908.

It is the contention of appellant that the contract entered into by the board of education of said city with said Repetti for the removal of garbage and refuse, and which is the contract under which the claim arose, is void, for the reason that Repetti is not a citizen of the United States, and that section 2 of article XVI of the charter of said city prohibits such contract. The section is as follows: "All deputies, clerks, assistants and other employees of said city and county must be citizens of the United States, and must during their respective terms of office or employment actually reside in the city and county, and must have so resided for one year next preceding their appointment."

Repetti was not an employee of the city within the meaning of the section. He was an independent contractor, who procured his contract by making the lowest responsible bid after the board of education had duly advertised for bids. The board of education had the power to let the contract to a corporation or to anyone else who would agree to do the work as an independent contractor. A statute like this, which restrains the right of a municipal corporation to employ certain classes of persons, must be given no broader construction than its plain words imply. A contractor, to whom a contract is let to construct a building, or a sewer, to pave a street or to perform any other work for a definite sum, is not an employee in the ordinary sense of the term. He ordinarily selects his own laborers, his own materials, and furnishes his own means of carrying out the contract. In this case Repetti *253 was to receive a monthly sum for the removal of all the garbage and refuse from all the public school buildings and grounds in the city and county of San Francisco. He was to furnish his own men, his own wagons and his own teams, and select his own time for doing the work provided that he did it according to the contract. The horses he used were as much employees of the city as were the men who did the work of loading or driving the wagons. The men, horses, wagons and tools used by Repetti were of his own selection.

It may be suggested that the complaint does not allege or show that the city and county of San Francisco or the plaintiff, as a taxpayer, would be injured by paying Repetti, who was a lower bidder than the appellant; nor does it in any way appear that appellant was injured because he does not allege that he could have made any profit out of the contract if it had been awarded to him.

The order is affirmed.

Kerrigan, J., concurred.






Addendum

I concur in the judgment and in all that is said in the opinion save as to the matter in the last paragraph.

A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on October 29, 1909.

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