219 Mass. 428 | Mass. | 1914
The plaintiffs’ right of recovery depends upon whether under the provisions of the revised charter found in St. of 1893, c. 444, the mayor was authorized to execute in behalf of the city the contract in question.
It is declared in § 2, that the government, general management and control of all the fiscal, prudential and municipal affairs of the city shall be vested in a single officer called the mayor, and in a body to be called the city council, except that control of the. public schools shall be vested in a school committee. By § 23, “The mayor shall be the chief executive officer of the city, and
But the scheme or framework of government is to be ascertained from all the provisions of the charter. The fire department for whose use the four automobile combination chemical and hose wagons were ordered having been established under § 42, it is a department of the city and the board of engineers lawfully created by ordinance is an administrative board within the purview of § 40. Bowers v. Selectmen of Needham, 216 Mass. 422. By § 40 the several administrative boards and officers having charge of departments “shall, within their respective departments,make and execute all necessary contracts, subject to the provisions of section eighteen of this act, employ all labor, purchase all materials and supplies, have charge of the construction, alteration and repair of all public buildings and works, have the entire care, custody and management of all public works, institutions, buildings and other property, and shall in general have the immediate direction and control of all executive and administrative business; and they shall at all times be accountable for the proper discharge of their duties to the mayor as the chief executive officer of the city.” It is further provided, that “all contracts made in behalf of the city in which the amount involved exceeds three hundred dollars shall, in order to be valid, require the signature of the mayor,
The words, “the several administrative boards and officers having charge of departments shall, within their respective departments, make and execute all necessary contracts,” cannot be divested of their natural import and signification. The contract must be made and executed by them, but if the amount involved exceeds three hundred dollars it is ineffectual unless approved by the mayor. Goddard v. Lowell, 179 Mass. 496. Webb Granite & Construction Co. v. Worcester, 187 Mass. 385, 389, 390. Ryan v. Boston, 204 Mass. 456. Commercial Wharf Cory. v. Boston, 208 Mass. 482, 488. Sullivan v. Mandell, 212 Mass. 174, 177, 178. The reference to § 18, where the city council or either branch is prohibited from taking part in the making of contracts “except as may hereafter be otherwise provided by ordinance,” need not be considered, as no ordinance making such provisions is referred to in the record.
The mode of contracting having been prescribed and limited by the charter it is exclusive, and the plaintiffs are bound by the limitation. Adams v. County of Essex, 205 Mass. 189, 197. We are therefore of opinion that the trial judge correctly ruled that the contract could not be enforced, and under the terms of the report judgment is to be entered for the defendant.
So ordered.