60 N.J.L. 78 | N.J. | 1897
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This writ brings up proceedings of the city council of Cape May for the lighting of the streets with electric lights.
On the'19th of March, 1896, the Franklin Electric Light Company submitted to the city council the following communication :
“To the President and Members of City Couneil:
“ The Franklin Electric Light Company hereby agrees to light the city of Cape May with as many electric lights as may be needed, and such lights to be similar to those lights now in use by said city, for a period of five years from the 15th day of May next, all night and every night, from dusk to sunrise, for the sum of thirty-five cents per night for each light so furnished. We agree to furnish such additional lights as-the city may need during the summer months, upon the same terms and at the same rate. We further agree, in the event of the acceptance by the city of the above-stated proposition, that said company will, on or before the first day of July next, move its present plant within the city limits, increase the capacity of the same and add thereto a fifteen-hundred incandescent light plant.”
This writ of certiorari brings up the above resolution.
The city claims the power to enter into a contract with the Franklin Electric Light Company for lighting the city, under the provisions of the act of 1894. The act of 1894 confers the power on the common council, in its representative capacity, to make contracts within the purview of the power granted by the act.
The contention on the part of the city is that, having power to make such a contract, it was competent for the city council to delegate the authority contemplated by the resolution to one of its committees. Green v. City of Cape May, 12 Vroom 45, and Burlington v. Dennison, 13 Id. 165, were cited to sustain this contention. Neither of these cases is applicable to the subject-matter of this proposed contract. In each of these cases the power delegated to a committee was the power to purchase a steam fire-engine, a power that was essentially ministerial. The power conferred by the act of 1894 is a power to enter into a contract comprising one of the most important functions of the city government and extending over a period of five years. Such a contract would necessarily involve an expenditure of a large amount of public money. A contract of this character should be entered into after the most careful consideration and made under the seal of the city, with all the formalities appropriate to the execution of contracts of so much importance. The proposition made by
We think that a contract such as was contemplated by this-resolution should either have been negotiated by the city council or, if the negotiations were conducted by a committee, should have been submitted to the city council for discussion, consideration and adoption, and that the resolution delegating power to make such a contract was not warranted by the statute in question.
Another objection to this resolution is that Johnson, a member of the city council who voted for the resolution, without whose vote the resolution could not have been adopted, was interested in the contract it purported to authorize. Section 84 of the city charter provides that no member of the-city council shall be directly or indirectly interested in any contract the expense of which shall be paid from the city treasury. Johnson testified that he held the certificate for one share of the stock of the Franklin Electric Light Company, that was given to him by Lafayette Miller, as collateral security for a debt that was still unpaid; that the certificate had never been formally assigned to him, and that he would have-handed it back to Miller if he had asked for it. He also-
This resolution must be declared invalid for both the reasons considered.