delivered the opinion of the court:
Prior to the hearing of this cause in the county court, and in apt time,-appellant filed the objections set forth in, the foregoing ■ statement. The cause came on for a hearing, and appellee offered all the formal proofs showing sufficient compliance with the law to entitle the People to a judgment for the sale of the propеrty in question unless the matters set forth in the objections above mentioned were sufficient to defeat the right to such judgment of sale. On motion of appellee, made at the close of the evidence for the People, and without any hearing thereon or without giving appellant opportunity to produce evidence in- support of said objeсtions, they were stricken from the files. The court heard evidence upon other objections, which are contained in the record, and rendered judgment of sale. Appellаnt prayed this appeal, and the only matters discussed or errors insisted upon is the action of the court in striking these objections from the files. There is evidence in the record tеnding to support these objections, but it was not admitted under them, as they were out of the record before such evidence was offered, or allowed to go to the court at all. It is therefore plain that in considering the errors insisted upon relative to these objections we can only look to the objections themselves, and are only callеd upon to determine whether the objections, on their face and by their terms, state enough that, should they be supported by sufficient evidence, they would be a bar to the judgment.
The power to restrict, by law, the right of an individual to contract for his services or labor for a longer period than eight hours in each day was fully considered by us in Ritchie v. People,
In Treat v. People,
In McChesney v. People,
Testing the objections which the court struck from the files by the foregoing holdings of this court, upon the questions raised by them, did the court properly strike them, or should they have been permitted to stand and evidence be introduced under them? In. the objections themsеlves we find this language: “That the specifications covering' the work called for by the ordinance for said alleged improvement, upon which specifications the contrаctors made their bids and which such contractors were obliged to accept, contained a provision,” and then the two provisions above referred to are set out. The objection further says: “And that by reason of such restrictions the bids upon said work were limited to such contractors as employed only citizen labor and who would agree that eig'ht hours only should constitute a day’s labor, by reason whereof the competition in bidding for said work was not such as is contemplated by the statute in that regard, and the proceedings ,with rеference to said contract were not in accordance with the statute covering the advertising and posting of notices for bids upon such work and the letting of contraсts therefor.” The objections further state that by reason of the restrictions in the specifications there was not free and unrestricted competition for the contract, аnd that the bidding and letting of said contract unjustly and arbitrarily discriminated between persons of the same class in designating whose bid would be received and considered in the letting of said contract. It seems to us that these objections were sufficiently specific to support proof, if it existed, that would bring appellant clearly within the rule announced by this court in the cases above mentioned, and if such proof had been offered it would have been a bar to the judgment that was entered.
Such being our view, we hold that the county court erred in sustаining the motion to strike, and in striking, these objections from the files, and the judgment of the county court is therefore. reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
