140 Mo. 145 | Mo. | 1897
This case was before the Supreme Court on a former appeal, reported 128 Mo. 188 (31 S. W. Rep. 756). Upon the trial following the return of the case to the circuit court, there was a judgment for plaintiff. The defendant, the city of Lamar, is now the appellant.
The pleadings were amended before the last trial. As some questions are raised in regard to them, it will be necessary to state their purport.
The answer (after a general denial) sets up several defenses relating to constitutional grounds of objection to the ordinance and contract. These will be mentioned again further on.
The answer also contained another defense the substance of which is that said ordinance provided that a constant and uninterrupted supply of clear and wholesome water should be furnished for the use of the city and its inhabitants; that there were months at a time between the first day of July, 1891, and the first day of January, 1893, when the waterworks did not furnish any water of any kind — all of which was at the time well known to plaintiff — and all the water which was furnished at any time was not clear or wholesome, but was muddy, filthy, foul, impure, unhealthy, and of no value whatever to the city or its inhabitants — all of which was all along known to plaintiff; that by the terms of said ordinance it was provided that the city should not pay or be liable for any hydrant rental 'or charge during any time that the waterworks should, by reason of being out of repair, or from any other
The plaintiff’s reply took issue on the new matter of the answer, above recited. The reply then declared that “defendant without notice to plaintiff that said water furnished was not satisfactory, at all times used and received the benefits of said water so furnished, and that it ought not now to be heard to complain of the character of water furnished by this plaintiff.”
The cause was tried before Judge Stratton and a jury.
The ordinance (99) was put in evidence by plaintiff. It authorized the city of Lamar to contract with Messrs. Snyder & Guinney “their associates orassigns,” for a term of twenty years, touching the exclusive right to erect and operate waterworks “for supplying water from the North Fork of Spring River, at a point north or northeast of this city, or from any other source of supply of water, not polluted by offensive matter of any kind, for domestic, manufacturing, fire extinguishing, and the various other uses of water that maybe needed in the said city.”
Various sections of the ordinance describe the plant to be erected for supplying water and the mode of distributing it within the city. A steel stand pipe or tower one hundred and twenty-five feet high is provided for.
The third section stipulates for certain kinds of pumping machinery, with a capacity of not less than “one million gallons per day, and sufficient to supply all the clear, pure and wholesome water that may be required for the various uses in the said city during the continuance of this ordinance.” . . . “The reservoir and filtering basin at the source of supply shall be the latest of modern Alterations, and shall have a storage capacity at all times necessary to supply the demands,
The fifth section requires the location of sixty fire hydrants, at various points in the city, as designated by the board of aldermen, and that the hydrants be kept in repair and supplied with water by the contractors.
Section 7 contains an agreement by the city, to pay for the use of the city hydrants (sixty in number) “for the supplying of water for the extinguishing of fires, flushing of gutters and sewers, and fire department uses, the sum of fifty dollars per annum for each and every hydrant so erected for the original sixty hydrants,” etc.; and in consideration of the above the contractors bound themselves and their assigns “to furnish for the use of said city and the inhabitants thereof, a constant and uninterrupted supply of clear and wholesome water during the whole term of this contract and in quality sufficient at all times and seasons to supply the reasonable needs and requirements of said city and inhabitants, in conformity in'all respects with the provisions of this ordinance.”
The ninth section contains an agreement by the city to pay eight per cent per annum on money due under the contract and unpaid.
The seventeenth section provides for a fire test, which, when satisfactorily made, shall inaugurate the actual effectiveness of the contract as to rentals. And from that time the contractors or their assigns are to “continue and furnish without default a constant and uninterrupted supply of clear and wholesome water, as heretofore set forth. Failing so to do, the said city may take possession, temporarily, of said works, machinery and appurtenances, and operate the same until insured that the works will be efficiently operated by the said A. H. Snyder and J. Ghnnney, their asso-
‘‘Section 18. The city shall not pay nor be liable for any hydrant rental or charge during any time that the waterworks shall by reason of being out of repair or from any other • cause, fail to furnish water, as required by the provisions of this ordinance and contract; nor for rental on any hydrant whilst out of condition for use, that may be so far out of-repair as not to be in a condition for use for more than twenty-four hours after said Snyder & Gruinney, their associates or assigns, shall have been notified in writing of its condition; and there shall be deducted from the next succeeding payment of hydrant rental thereafter such proportion of the total rent, or hydrant rental, as the case may be, as 'the time of such failure may bear to the annual hydrant rental contemplated by this ordinance and contract.”
. The nineteenth section provides for a special annual tax not exceeding forty cents on the $100 valuation on all taxable property, if necessary, to pay the rentals; and the last (twentieth) section requires the submission of the ordinance to the people and its acceptance by a two thirds vote as required by the charter of cities of the fourth class to which Lamar belongs.
. After the ordinance had been ratified by a majority of two thirds of the voters of the city at the special election for that purpose, a contract was closed between plaintiff and the city, on the basis of the ordinance. The original contractors had meantime assigned their interests so that, when the contract was made, the plaintiff company stood in their place, as an “assign,” and was so recognized in the final agreement which put the stipulations for rent, etc., into full operation.
Some objections are based on the admission of those assignments at the trial.
The most important ruling complained of was the exclusion of testimony offered by defendant to show that during a considerable period covered by plaintiff’s claim for rentals the water furnished by plaintiff was not clear and wholesome.
But it further appeared from evidence of plaintiff and of defendant that, with the exception of a short 'period, from November 2, 1891 (when defendant notified plaintiff, that the water was not satisfactory) to January 11, 1892, when a resolution rescinding the notice was passed, the defendant had continued to take and use the water without making any objection to its quality, until after this action was brought.
The instructions of the court at the close of the evidence it will not be necessary to recite at length. The jury found for plaintiff on the first breach of contract, for $250; on the second, for $1,890; and on the third, for $1,830.
The defendant then appealed in proper form.
1. Some constitutional objections to the ordinance and contract were submitted to the trial court, the same which were passed upon when the case was in the Supreme Court on a former occasion (128 Mo. 188). The defendant asks the court to re-examine the judgment announced at that time and to reverse it. But the majority of the court have determined to adhere to the rulings then made without reopening the discussion.
2. We regard the ordinance and contract as im
3. It is insisted that the court erred in admitting the ordinance and contract in evidence because no allegation of the assignment of rights by the first contractors to the plaintiff is contained in the petition. The assignments occurred before the contract was made which accepted performance of the conditions and put the ordinance into force as to rentals. The final contract was made with the present plaintiff, and this action is based thereon. It was not necessary to allege any of the intermediate assignments. The city sanctioned them by finally closing the contract with the plaintiff company.
4. The most important new question of this appeal arises on the court’s action excluding evidence that the wTater furnished under the contract was filthy
But the evidence which accompanied defendant’s effort to get before the jury the fact of the bad quality of the water (as well as very much independent testimony on both sides, admitted without objection) discloses that, with the exception of a period of about two months (for which due credit was obtained by defendant in the result) the defendant received the water as supplied by plaintiff and made no objection to its quality, until after this action was brought.
The plaintiff asserted a waiver of the quality in its reply, and all the testimony supports that plea.
It is one of the established principles of the law of sales, a principle founded on the plainest dictates of justice, that where an article is furnished, pursuant to a contract requiring it to be of a certain quality, the buyer must, at least, object to its quality within a reasonable time after its receipt, else the law will treat the receipt as a final acceptance, and preclude any later objection on the ground of inferior quality. Benjamin, Sales, sec. 703; Graff v. Foster (1878) 67 Mo. 520; Water Co. v. Aurora (1895) 129 Mo. 540 (31 S. W. Rep. 946).
We know of no reason why that rule of law should not be applicable to the water furnished by defendant to plaintiff. It would be plainly unjust for defendant to receive' the water, as furnished under the contract
The ordinance and contract in this case, viewed in their entirety, give strong support to the. application of the principle above mentioned. They do not seem to imperatively demand a high quality of water as a condition to payment of rental, but rather seem to carry the thought that the water should be satisfactory to the defendant.. The main source of supply is named, and summary remedies for default on plaintiff’s part are provided. The terms of the agreement give little countenance to the theory that the quality of water might furnish a defense to payment, in the absence of any reasonable and timely objection thereto. On the admitted facts, as shown by all the witnesses who touched upon the subject, no such objection by defendant was made during any period of time in which the water was received and for which payment was accorded by the verdict. Hence it is wholly immaterial whether or not the water in fact furnished by plaintiff was clear and wholesome. The ruling of the learned court ’excluding that testimony was therefore harmless, and we should ignore it in obedience to the command of the law which declares that no judgment shall be reversed for any error, unless it materially affects the merits of the action. R. S. 1889, secs. 2303, 2100.
No other assignments of error appear to require comment.