83 Miss. 677 | Miss. | 1903
delivered the opinion of the court.
The board of supervisors of Marion county, at s. meeting regularly held in December, 1896, awarded to appellee a contract to construct a steel bridge across Pearl river- near Columbia, in that county, for the sum of 816,000, to be paid on the 1st of January, 1898. The order recites that the bid of Fox-worth to furnish and construct said bridge according to the plans and specifications on file was accepted by the board, and “the president hereof authorized to sign on behalf of this board any and all contracts (which contract for the building of such bridge was and is approved by this board in open session, and signed by the president for the board by its direction).” The said order further provided that the president of the board was “specially authorized to release said contractor or his assigns from the time limit in said contract for the completion of said
The question here presented is what power the board of supervisors of a county has in reference to additional or extra work thought necessary for the completion of any public work already contracted for. This subject has been treated of by this court on several occasions heretofore, and we see no reason for changing the rule announced in previous adjudications, so far as applicable to the state of the ease here made. In every public work of any considerable magnitude it must often, if not invariably, happen during the progress of the building that some deviations from the plans and specifications as originally adopted will be found necessary: some difference in the nature and character of the foundation, some change of location deemed advisable, will inevitably demand modifications, to a greater or lesser extent, in the original plan. This is peculiarly the case in constructing bridges over streams. A trivial mistake in the measurement of the channel to be spanned, a slight change of location, a difference in the nature of the soil in which the foundation must be imbedded, will each require certain absolutely necessary changes, which must be made in order to insure a secure and stable structure. The board of supervisors, as a body, had the right to contract for such changes and additions without going through the formality of an advertisement for sealed bids. The exigencies of the occasion, the fact that these defects can only be discovered while the work is in actual progress, render it im
This disposes of the main question involved in the case. It is conceded by some of the counsel for the appellant that the decree of the chancellor awarding to appellee the $1,110 retained by the county was correct, but, as other counsel urge us to pass-
Inasmuch as it is impossible for us, from this record, to say with certainty what proportion of the bill for extra work was for material and labor applied for the bridge proper, and what proportion is claimed on account of the erection of fenders above and below the bridge, we must reverse the case so that this may be ascertained in the court below, and appellee given a decree only for so much of said items as is due for work performed and material used on the bridge itself. The amount so found
Reversed and remanded.