17 Ohio App. 177 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1922
This cause comes into this court by appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of
It is apparent that the plaintiffs in their petition, and the lower court by its action, had a wrong conception of the legal effect of a decree of rescission. Such a decree voids the whole contract, and the parties to the contract stand in relation to each other as if the contract “is not and never was.” It necessarily follows from this that a recovery in quantum meruit must be for the whole amount of work done. This involves proof as to the reasonable value of all the work done. From the value of the whole work, as found from the evidence, there may be taken any payments theretofore made, and a finding made for the amount only, if any, remaining due after the deduction of said payments.
The defendants interpose many objections to the equitable relief prayed for in this action.
The construction of this ditch was undertaken bv the county commissioners on the petition of
“That said improvement is not of sufficient importance to the public to cause said damages and compensation which have been assessed to be paid out of the county treasury, no more than the board of county commissioners of Hocking county, Ohio, have agreed to build the two new bridges as required by the said improvement.”
Under this finding the ditch became an improvement in which only the assessed landowners were interested, and which, when completed, became their personal property. In the case of Board of County Commissioners of Portage County v. Gates, 83 Ohio St., 19, it is held:
“The county commissioners, sitting as a board, in hearing an application on the part of landowners for the establishment of a ditch, as provided by Section 4447, and following of the Revised Statutes, represent the landowners, ' petitioners, and not the county, where it is found that the improvement is of local interest only, and that the cost and expense should be assessed wholly against the lands benefited.”
Again, on page 31 of the opinion, it is said:
“No finding appears wdiieh relieves the ditch from being simply a private ditch as between the landowners benefited and the public at large, and
In the case of Commissioners v. Krauss, there referred to, the court further said:
“With the fixing of the time for the sale of the construction of the improvement and the appointment of an engineer to superintend its construction the connection of the county commissioners with the improvement substantially ends. No duties of supervision are imposed on them. * # *
“On the bond given by the engineer, an action may be brought by any person aggrieved by his failure to do his duty, and a recovery had for his use and benefit, Section 4494, Revised Statutes; and on the bond given by the contractor, a suit may be brought by any one who has sustained damages in consequence of the contractor’s failure to perform the work, and a recovery had for his damages, Section 4478, Revised Statutes.”
In the case of Smith et al., Commissioners, v. Griffin, 9 C. C., 223, 225, affirmed without report, 56 Ohio St., 775, it is said:
“It is true that under the provisions of the statute, the enforcement of proper and sufficient drainage of lands in localities requiring it, is worked out through application to the board of commissioners, wbo, together with the engineer and other instrumentalities provided, have charge of the work; yet, in the performance of such official du
“If any relation of agency exists in such case, they would seem to be more the agents of the parties interested in the drainage, and who, by petition, have invoked the action of the commissioners, than of the taxpayers and people of the county.”
In view of these decisions, we cannot adopt the theory that the contract before us is -a contract for a public improvement and subject to all the limitations that surround a contract of that kind. We are unable to say that the doctrine of Buchanan Bridge Co. v. Campbell, 60 Ohio St., 406, and other kindred eases cited by the defendants, has any application to the case before us. If we are correct in this deduction the contract in question is not a public contract, and in its execution the parties thereto have dealt with each other only in a private capacity, the contractors for themselves and the commissioners as the representatives of the landowners. We are, therefore, unable to see why this contract should not be treated in a court of equity as one subject to all the rules pertaining to the reformation or rescission of a private contract. The mistake was mutual. The commissioners believed they were making a contract which involved an excavation of 335,012 cubic yards, a contract which imposed upon them the duty of excavating only that quantity. As to that particular item, therefore, both parties were mistaken. While a mutual mistake is ordinarily regarded as a ground for the rescission of a contract it may
It is urged that the plaintiffs were negligent in not discovering the mistake before making their bid for the work. It is not at all clear that they had an opportunity to go over the plans and estimates, or that the latter were on file prior to the day of the sale. But conceding that the plaintiffs
It is further contended that the plaintiffs rati(fied the contract by continuing to work after they ^discovered the error in the estimate. The facts show that they continued to work because of negotiations between them and the County Surveyor and Commissioners, looking to a settlement of this mistake, and because they construed their contract as requiring them to excavate 335,012 cubic yards in any and all events. There is not the slightest evidence before us which would warrant the conclusion that they intended to ratify the contract by continuing the work.
The completion of the ditch under this decree will relieve the lands from any overflowing water now complained of by the landowners, and will furnish the necessary drainage they asked for in the first instance. If after completion the improvement does not remove all the grounds of their present complaint the failure is in the plan of construction, and as to this they should have objected at the time of its adoption. Whatever damage from this source, or from the mistake of the engineer in his estimates, which any landowner has or may sustain is a matter of adjustment be
The questions presented in this suit seem to have no parallel in any of the reported cases in this state. While we are not disposed to question the correctness of the principles announced in the case of Long v. Inhabitants of Athol, 196 Mass., 497, we prefer to hold that the contract before us is a private contract in the sense that it is subject to the same rules of equity as would obtain in the adjustment of the rig’hts of parties to a private contract under the same facts.
Decree accordingly.