20 Md. 1 | Md. | 1863
delivered the opinion of this Court:
The appellees sued the appellants, on a special contract •under seal, entitled, “Articles of Agreement, made and concluded this 11th of August, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred, and fifty-six, between Joseph P. Shannon, City Commissioner, acting for and in behalf of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, of the first part, and Henry R. Reynolds and Josiah Reynolds, trading and doing business under the name and firm of H. R. and J. Reynolds, of the second part.” .
The nar., after reciting the Resolution, the Articles of Agreement, etc., avers that, after the making and approval of said contract the said plaintiffs did actually enter upon the execution of said, contract, and the performance of the work therein mentioned, and thenceforth continued in the execution of said contract, and performance of said work, until the defendant caused to be stopped and did stop the work on said jail and prevented said plaintiffs from the further execution of the same, as thereinafter set forth and pleaded. The appellees aver, that when they entered on the execution of - said contraet, they were ready and prepared to build in accordance with the plan of Thos. and J. W. Dixon, architects of the City of Baltimore, as mentioned in said contract, and were ready and prepared (in case the said T. P. Shannon should deem it necessary, and determined to make any or all of the improvements specified in said Resolution) and should so direct, to huild said new jail comformahly to the directions in that behalf of said Shannon, and the said Shannon, deeming it necessary, did determine to make certain of the improvements, and did direct the appellees to build the said new jail in conformity to the directions of said Shannon, which directions were observed, obeyed and followed by them, and the appellants caused the said work to be stopped.
The contract and its breaches as alleged, are put in issue by the first three pleas of the appellants; the other pleas
The appellants, being a public, municipal corporation or body politic, acting by a legally constituted officer, known as the City Commissioner, whose- powers in the premises were conferred by a special resolution, it is obvious that in deciding what was the contract, the Court must pass on all the questions involved in the construction of such contracts, made by public officers; and primarily, whether the paper declared to be a valid contract, was within the special authority conferred on theCommissioner.
The authority of the agent, the description of the building to be erected, the plan and specifications, the manner in which the contract should be made, the duty of the Commissioner in superintending the work, and an injunction, to 11 cause the work to he done in strict conformity to the plan and specifications agreed upon,” are to be found in the Resolution of the appellants of the 8th of July 1856, viz:
Resolved, hy the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, that the City Commissioner be and he is hereby authorised and directed to advertise immediately, in two or more of the daily newspapers of the City of Baltimore, for such period of time as he may judge necessary, for proposals for building a new jail on the site or lot on which the old jail now stands; said new jail to be built according to the plan and specifications submitted by Thomas and J. W. Dixon, to the committee on police and jail of the City Council of 1855, and now on file in the office of the City Register, with such alterations as may be necessary to enlarge the
The express conditions of this power are:
1st. Proposals for building according to tbe plan and specifications on file with the City Commissioner, with such alterations as may be necessary, in tbe event the City Commissioner should deem such alterations advisable.
2nd. A contract, in the form usally made for the erection of buildings, for the use of the City, with some one or more of the bidders.
3rd. Tbe construction of the work, in strict conformity to the plans and specifications agreed upon. In other words, the plan, specifications and price, of building the new jail, including tho alterations, in the event of their being deemed necessary, were to be embodied in the contract, in the form usually made for the erection of buildings for the use of the City.
The direction to advertise for proposals, implies that the work was to be clone upon a pre-arranged plan and at an ascertained, rate of compensation. Such is the manner and form in which contracts are usually made for the erection of buildings for the use of the City. Strict conformity with the plans and specifications agreed upon, could not otherwise bo enforced.
A power, to alter certain plans and specifications if deemed necessary, and contract for building Mri conformity te
The former, is a special limited power, Certain and safe, the execution of which fixes a legal liability; the" latter is indefinite!, unlimited, beyond supervision or control. The nature of the trust committed to the Commissioner, and the source from which he derived his authority, stamped upon it the restraints of a special power, if the language of the Resolution did not clearly impose them. Acting for a community, all whose expenses’ must be defrayed by appropriations derived from taxation and- rigidly accounted for; usage, public economy, fidelity of financial agents, as well as the specific appropriation of public' fufids, required express special contract, by plan and specification, previously agreed upon and approved, by which the sum total of the cost could be estimated and provided for. The Articles of Agreement recite that the appellees “have contracted with Joseph P. Shannon, City Commissioner, to erect a new jail within the enclosure in which the present jail is now located, for the sum of $102,750, said new jail to be built in compliance with a Resolution of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, approved July 8th, 1856', and agreeably to and in accordance with the plan and specifications submitted by Thomas and J. W. Dixon, architects of the City of Baltimore; said plan and specifications being selected by Virtue of the Resolution referred to and now on file, in connection with all other papers relating thereto, in the office of the City Commissioner.” Thus far, the Articles seem to be in strict compliance with the Resolution. They aver that the Commissioner and the appellees have contracted for a fixed sum, and adopted the plan and specifications selected by the appellant’s Besolution'. If this were true, the authority of the Commissioner as to the form of the contract and plan of the building, was functus officio, exhausted. Nothing remained for him but to see the contract executed “in conformity to the plan and specifications agreed on.”
Instead of a contract, for work to be done, according to plan and specification agreed on, hero is an agreement which authorises the parties to abandon the plan and specifications which they have just declared they had adopted, and execute the work according to future directions for a fair and reasonable allowance, to be ascertained by one of the parties thereto, or by arbitration. That is, the parties are to he remitted, to the remedies resorted to, where there is no express, but only an implied contract, a quantum meruit or quantum valébat. It is impossible to find in the Resolution, any warrant for these extraordinary clauses of the Articles.
The appellants never designed to commit the credit of the City to the custody of the City Commissioner to bo pledged at bis discretion, in the erection of any alterations or improvements, without plan, specification-or price, previously ascertained and agreed on. They did not delegate to him the power to determine the amount to ho paid for the work, except in the manner prescribed by the Resolution. Least of all have they authorised him, in case of
"The most guiding principle in the construction of powers, is to be derived from a consideration of the purpose, which the agent or depositary of power is appointed to accomplish. Every express agency is special according to the legal signification of that word, and the only reasonable distinction is between express and implied.”
The rule of the common law is, that no man can be bound by the act of another without or beyond his consent, and where an agent acts under a special or express authority, whether written or verbal, the party dealing with him is bound to know at Ms peril, what the power of the agent is, and to understand its legal effect, and if the agent exceed the boundary of his legal powers, the act, as concerns the principal, is void. 1 Am. L. Ca., 544. 26 Wend., 193, 122, and other cases there cited.
The Resolution of the 8th July 1856, was in this instance the special express written authority of the City Commissioner. The contractors were advertised by its terms of the extent of his powers, his letter of attorney was before them; they were bound to know, at their peril, what his power was, and to understand its legal effect.
In a very recent case decided by this Court, the general principles governing the contracts of public agents were thus expressed: "The fact that the contract made, related to a subject within the general scope of his powers, does not make it obligatory on the appellants, if there was a want of specific power to make it. Although a private agent acting in violation of specific instructions, yet within the scope of a general authority, may bind his principal, ihe rule as to the effect of a like act of a public agent, is otherwise. The City Commissioner was the public agent
“It is better that an individual should now and then suffer by such mistakes, than to introduce a rule against an abuse of which, by improper collusions, it would be very difficult for the public to protect itself.” Lee vs. Munroe, 7 Cranch, 370.
It is contended that the act of the Commissioner, if ultra vires in any particular, was recognised in various ways by the appellants as valid and binding, and especially by the Ordinance of the 33st December 1856, entitled “An Ordinance to provide for payments on account of the new jail, now being erected.”
The plaintiffs (appellees) first prayer groups together the various modes of recognition and approval, as facts, which if found, authorised the Court to declare the paper dated the 11th of August 1856, was a valid and binding
The cases cited by the appellees to support the doctrine of recognition and ratification, are none of them cases of municipal corporations, created for public purposes, but those of private corporations aggregate, governed by boards of directors, representing stockholders, whose corporate capital is invested for their private advantage. ’ Their relation is very different from that of members of councils of a municipal body, organised for public purposes, elected by the people at stated periods, disbursing funds raised by annual assessments.
Even in the former class of cases it must be shown, that the corporation, through its proper officer, knew the terms of the contract and had full knowledge of all the circumstances of the case. Angel & Ames on Corprs., 304.
“Acts or acquiescence do not, as is sometimes carelessly said, ratify the unauthorised contract; but, in the more guarded and philosophical language of the better authori
“Now that conduct, which in a merchant or other individual who is cognizant of his own affairs and able to interfere at any time in disavowing the abuse of his confidence, would indicate that he did not thus disavow his agent’s conduct, is not significant in the same manner of the will of a sovereign government, which must act according to its constitution and laws, whilst the people can know the acts of its agents only through its representatives. It was well replied by the Attorney General to this part of the argument, that all the State officers together, including the Governor, the Auditor and the fund Commissioners, could not legally make such a contract as this; and therefore they could not ratify it directly, much less indirectly, by acts signifying acquiescence.” Delafidd vs. The State of Illinois, 26 Wend., 192, Verplank, Senator. Keeping the distinction between private and public municipal corporations in view, tho observations of Senator Yerplank in the case cited, are eminently appropriate. The Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, could not officially know the condition of affairs until they were reported through their proper officers. They could not interfere in disavowing the acts of their agents until they wore cognizant of the facts, and then they must act according to their charter and by-laws.
There is uo evidence in this case of that full knowledge of the facts, on the part of the City Council, at the passage of the Ordinance of 31st December 1856, which these authorities seem to require, and the act of supposed ratification, instead of being independent and substantive, founded on complete information, was incidental and casual, before any evidence of the alterations in the plan adopted, had been officially brought to their knowledge. The only act of ratification referred to in the plaintiffs’ first prayer, on the part of the City Councils, is the Ordinance of 31st
But cities and other purely municipal corporations or bodies politic, which are allowed to assume some of the duties of the State, in a partial or detailed form, having neither property nor power for the purposes of personal aggrandizement can be considered in no other light than as auxiliaries of the government, and as secondary and deputy trustees, and servants of the people. McKim vs. Odom, 3 Bland, 417. Ang. & Ames on Corps., 11.
Agents themselves, not principals, answerable to their constituents, they are not to be presumed to recognise and incidentally ratify and confirm the acts of their officers, done beyond the scope of their authority. Acts of ratification by such bodies politic should be direct, explicit, unequivocal, with full knowledge of the facts.
In the opinion of this Court, the first instruction or prayer submitted by the appellees and granted by the Court below, was erroneous in declaring that the paper dated the 11th August 1856, was a valid and binding contract between the appellants and appellees, the same being in fact and in law contrary to the provisions of the Resolution of the 8th July preceding, in pursuance of which it professed to be made and without sufficient evidence of ratification.
There being no evidence of a valid contract, the subsequent prayers based upon its assumed validity, must fall
Judgment reversed.