44 Wash. 250 | Wash. | 1906
This appeal is from an order of the superior court of Pierce county, adjudging a contract between the city of Tacoma and the Barber Asphalt Paving Company void, and for that reason annulling an assessment made by the city to pay for certain street improvements made under the contract. The city appeals.
The facts are that the city of Tacoma, in the year 1905, passed a resolution and ordinance, providing for the paving of certain streets and alleys in said city, designating the district as “improvement district No. 252.” These improvements were ordered to be made at the expense of the property specially benefited thereby, payment to be made to the contractors in bonds which were to mature annually for a period of years. The commissioner of public works was directed to prepare plans and specifications and make estimates of the cost of the improvements, and to call for bids for the work. This was done, and upon public advertisement a contract was let to the Barber Asphalt Paving Company, and duly signed on March 29, 1905. By the terms of this contract and the specifications which were made a part thereof,
“If said improvements be not completed within one hundred and twenty days after the execution of this contract, a demurrage will be charged as hereinafter set forth, but due allowance will be made for such days that rain prevents the execution of this work in a proper manner. The commissioner of public works shall decide the number of days to be allowed. Said time, however, shall not extend beyond the one hundred and sixty day limit.”
The demurrage provided for was $25 per day after one hundred and twenty days. The contract also provided that the work should be done under the supervision and to the satisfaction of the commissioner of public works. The paving company, after making the contract, entered upon the work, and continued to perform the same until about the 13th day of July, 1905, when the paving company was directed by authority of the commissioner of public works to cease work until other pavement which was being done in other districts adjoining district No. 252 could be brought up and fitted and connected to this work. In obedience to this request, the paving company ceased work on this contract until about September 14, 1905. The one hundred and sixty-day limit expired on September 5, 1905. On the next day these respondents served written notice on the commissioner of public works that the time limit for the. completion of the contract had expired, and demanded that he permit no further work by the paving company upon said contract, and that the commissioner of public works proceed to let a contract for the completion of the work; The commissioner of public works paid no attention to this notice, but permitted the paving company to finish the work on or about the 14th and 15th days of September, and thereafter accepted the completed work.
Subsequently an assessment roll was prepared, assessing the property of respondents and others specially benefited, for the payment of the cost of the improvement, viz.', $105,-
Upon trial to the court without a jury, the court found that the contract had not been completed within one hundred and sixty days as therein provided, and was therefore void; and concluded that the city of Tacoma had no power to levy an assessment for work done under the contract, and entered a judgment annulling the assessment in so far as the same affects the respondents’ property.
The question in this case is, did the commissioner of public works have authority for any reason'to stop the work under the contract, and thereby extend the time when the work should be finally completed? Respondents contend that he had no such authority. Appellant, while contending for the affirmative of the question, also insists that the work was substantially completed when it was stopped by the commissioner of public works; the facts in this respect being that the whole contract contained about forty thousand square yards of paving which had all been done except about eight hundred and thirty-six square yards, or, as is claimed by the respondents, about'one thousand four hundred and sixty-four square yards, which uncompleted work was at several street intersections. It was claimed that these intersections could
Under the view we take of the main question in the case, it will not be necessary to decide or to discuss the question of substantial performance. The city charter of Tacoma provides at § 160, that all public work authorized by the city council shall be done by contract under the supervision of the commissioner of public works; but before awarding any contract, the commissioner of public works shall cause notice to-be given inviting sealed proposals therefor. Section 164 provides that the notice shall contain a general description of the work to be done, the materials or supplies to be furnished, and the time within which the work is to be commenced and when to be completed, and shall refer to the plans and specifications on file in the office of the commissioner of public works for full details of the work. ’Section 165 provides that all contracts shall be drawn under the supervision of the city attorney and shall have attached thereto detailed specifications of the work to be done, which shall be referred to and made part of the contract; that every contract entered into by the commissioner of public works shall be signed by him and by the other contracting party, and that,
“ . . . the contract for work shall specify the time within which the work shall be commenced and when to be completed as was specified in the notice inviting proposals therefor. In case of failure on the part of the contractor to complete his contract within the time fixed, his contract shall be void, and the city shall not pay or allow him any compensation for work done by him under said contract.
“Sec. 166. If the contractor does not complete his work within the time limited therein, said commissioner of public \works may reject the unfinished portion óf said work after pursuing the formalities hereinbefore prescribed for the letting of the whole.
The contract entered into by the Barber Asphalt Paving Company and the commissioner of public works substantially followed the provisions of the charter above set out. The language of the contract in this respect is as follows:
“Said contractor agrees to construct and complete said improvement in accordance with the plans and specifications heretofore prepared by the city engineer of said city, and in pursuance of the terms of a resolution adopted by the city council of the city of Tacoma, on the 25th day of January, 1905, ordering said improvement to be made, and ordinance No. 2321 of the city of Tacoma, and in strict accordance with and conforming to the drawings, plans and specifications for said improvement filed in the office of the commissioner of public works of the city of Tacoma on the 27th day of January, 1905, a copy of which said plans and specifications are hereto attached, marked Exhibit “A,” and made a part of this agreement. The work hereby contracted for shall be commenced within ten days after the signing and execution of this contract, and the whole of said materials and supplies shall be furnished and said work completed within one hundred and sixty days after the execution of this contract; but if said improvement be not completed within one hundred and twenty days after the execution of this contract, a demurrage will be charged, as hereinafter set forth, but due allowance will be made for such days that rain prevents the execution of this work in a proper manner. The commissioner of public works shall decide the number of days to be allowed; said time, however, shall not extend beyond the 160-day limit. In case the contractor fails to complete the work within one hundred and twenty days after the execution of the contract, he shall pay to the city of Tacoma, as pen
It is claimed that these provisions of the city charter and contract are mandatory. We may readily concede that they are so, and that they control both the contractor and the city officials in regard to the work which is to be performed under the provisions thereof. But, in order to arrive at a correct understanding of their scope and meaning, we must consider the object for which they were enacted as well as the language used. The provisions that the contract shall specify the time within which the work shall be completed and that the failure of the contractor to complete the work in the time fixed shall render the contract void, were clearly for the benefit of the city, and were intended to prevent unnecessary delays and failure on the part of the contractor to diligently prosecute the work. ■ They were not intended to guard against delays caused by the city or the commissioner of public works and
In this case it is shown without dispute that the work was neai’ly completed well within the time, and that the contractor could have performed his work within the one hundred and twenty days, and that he would have done so but for the request of the commissioner of public works that the work cease until certain other work in other districts was done;
Counsel for respondents cites a number of cases where the contract was extended after the time limit had expired, and after the contract had become void, and it was there held that the contracts became void at the expiration of the time limit, and that there was no power to revive a void contract after that time. Those cases were clearly right. If the contractor in this case, without the direction of the commissioner of public works or in violation of his orders, had permitted the one hundred and sixty-day limit to expire, his contract no doubt would in that case have become void according to the express terms of the charter and the contract, and no power is vested either in the city or in the commissioner of public works to revive the same, and the authorities cited would in such cases be in point. But, because the contractor obeyed the direction «of the commissioner of public works, as he was obliged to do, while his contract was yet in force and still alive, this case is not controlled by the cases cited. We are of the opinion that the commissioner of public works was authorized to stop the work at any time before the expiration of the limit, in good faith for the benefit of the city, and that such time lost without the fault of the contractor' should not be considered to avoid the contract. For this reason the lower court erred in holding the contract void, and in annulling the assessment roll.
The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to the lower c.ourt.to dismiss the appeal of the city council and to affirm the assessment roll.
Rudkin, Dunbar, Crow, Root, Fullerton, and Hadley. JJ., concur.