205 P. 217 | Mont. | 1922
prepared the opinion for the court.
The complaint in this action in substance alleges that, at all the times mentioned therein, the plaintiff was a corporation under the laws of Colorado, and the defendant was a duly created, organized and existing school district under the' laws of Montana; that on the first day of June, 1917, defendant entered into a written contract with plaintiff to sell and deliver to plaintiff $6,000 of six per cent bonds of the defendant school district, in which contract it agreed to take such proceedings as the attorneys for plaintiff might direct and prepare, so that said bonds might be duly authorized to be issued, and issued and delivered to plaintiff, which contract, and the acceptance thereof by defendant, are as follows:
“Subject: Sheridan Co. (Mont.) S.'D.—"Westby.
“Hon. Board of School Trustees, Westby School District No. 3, Westby, Montana.
“Gentlemen: For $6,000.00 six per cent. (6%) bonds of your school district, to be dated June 1st, 1917, absolutely due and payable in twenty (20) years, but redeemable according to law, with' principal and semiannual interest payable at the county treasurer’s office, Sheridan county, Montana, or at the National Bank of Commerce, in' New York City, at our option, we will, upon delivery of the bonds to us in Denver, Colorado when accompanied by complete evidence of their legality in form satisfactory to our attorneys, pay you the sum of $6,050.00, including accrued interest.
“Prior to the delivery of the bonds, it is understood and agreed that your board will take such steps and adopt any and all proceedings that our attorneys may direct and prepare, to the end that said bonds are duly authorized to be issued, and issued, and delivered to us without undue or unnecessary delay.
“This bid is for immediate acceptance only.
“ Resp ectfully submitted,
“Keeler Brothers,
“By [Signed] Geo. E. Keeler.
“State of Montana, County of Sheridan, School District No. 3—ss.:
“The above bid of Keeler Brothers, of Denver, Colorado, accepted for and on behalf of Sheridan county school district No. 3 by order of its board of school trustees and entered of record this first day of June, A. D. 1917. Receipt of the above-mentioned certified check is also hereby acknowledged.
“[Signed] E. N. Hinshaw, Chairman.
“Attest:
“[Signed] E. E. Severeid.
“[Seal.] [Signed] E. O. Mann, Clerk.”
It is further alleged that plaintiff has fully complied with all its covenants under said contract, and has offered to pay to defendant the full contract price for the bonds, upon performance by defendant of its covenant relative to the adoption of proceedings necessary to the legal issuance and delivery thereof, which proceedings had been directed and prepared by plaintiff’s attorneys long prior to the commencement of this action and demand made upon defendant to adopt the same and take the necessary proceedings to legally issue the bonds and deliver them to plaintiff, but that defendant had refused, failed, and neglected to do so.
In paragraph YII it is alleged that prior to the commencement of this suit, defendant had sold and delivered said bonds to a purchaser other than plaintiff and thereby voluntarily made the performance of the contract on its part impossible.
The complaint further contains allegations of damages to plaintiff in the sum of $200 for fees paid to attorneys for the
To this complaint defendant filed a general demurrer which was overruled, and, having failed to answer within the time allowed by order of the court, on January 24, 1919, judgment was entered against defendant for the sum of $758.07 and costs of suit.
The ease is now before this court upon defendant’s appeal from this judgment. The sole question presented is whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
Bearing in mind that the complaint stands confronted only
If upon any facts stated, from any point of view, the plaintiff is entitled to relief, the complaint will be sustained. (Hicks v. Rupp, 49 Mont. 40, 140 Pac. 97.)
Paragraph VII of the complaint, standing by itself, might justify a conclusion that at the time the contract pleaded was entered into, the defendant had taken the steps necessary to issue the bonds; but in the face of the other allegations of the complaint, such a conclusion is not warranted.
The plaintiff’s own construction of the contract pleaded is that the defendant “covenanted and agreed to take such steps and adopt any and all proceedings that the attorneys of
In at least four separate statements in the complaint it is alleged that defendant has failed, neglected, and refused to adopt and take the necessary proceedings to legally issue said bonds.
Construing the allegations of the complaint most favorably to the plaintiff, the only logical inference to be drawn is that at the time the contract was entered into the statutory proceedings necessary to be taken by the defendant to authorize its board of trustees to issue the bonds of the district and deliver them to the plaintiff had not been taken.
The statutes in force at the date of this contract, relative to the issuance and delivery of bonds by a school district are contained in Session Laws of 1913, Chapter 76, at page 285 et seq., and they require, before such bonds can be issued and delivered: (1) A submission of the question of their issuance to the qualified electors of the district, and a majority vote in their favor; (2) the actual execution of the bonds by the chairman and clerk of the board, and their registration by the county treasurer in a book provided for that purpose; (3) a sale of the bonds after a call for bids therefor has been published in some newspaper for a period of not less than four weeks, or if the bids received are not satisfactory, a rejection of the bids by the trustees, after which they may be sold at private sale; and (4) after bids are accepted, a payment of the price into the county treasury, and then the actual delivery of the bonds to the purchaser.
In State ex rel. Bean v. Lyons, 37 Mont. 354, 96 Pac. 922, this court, in construing the power of the board of school trustees, held that statutes granting and defining powers of municipal and qwsi-munieipal bodies, such as school districts, will be construed not only as a grant of powers to such board, but also as a limitation.thereon, both as to its extent and as to “the mode of its exercise.
The contract of a municipal corporation made otherwise
It appears by the affirmative allegations of the complaint
As a condition precedent to its right to have the defendant’s bonds delivered to it, in any event, the plaintiff would have been required, under the statute referred to above, to actually pay the purchase price into the county treasury. There is no allegation in the complaint that the plaintiff had performed or tendered performance of this condition. The absence of such allegation renders the complaint fatally defective. j
For the reasons above indicated, the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and the court erred in overruling the demurrer thereto.
Counsel for plaintiff contend that the objections to the
“Ultra vires contracts” of a municipal corporation are such as the corporation has no power to make under any circumstances or for any purpose; but when a municipal corporation enters into a contract which, under existing law, it has authority to make, but fails to follow the procedure laid down by statute, it is not “ultra vires,” but irregular. (Rogers v. City of Omaha, 80 Neb. 591, 114 N. W. 833.)
We recommend that the judgment be reverséd and the cause remanded to the district court, with instructions to sustain the defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint.
Per Curiam: For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded to the district court, with instructions to sustain the defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint.
Reversed.