103 P. 924 | Cal. | 1909
This is an action to foreclose liens upon an assessment for sewer work. Judgment passed for the plaintiff, and the defendant property-owner appeals.
1. The specifications for the work provided that "if, in the judgment of the city engineer, it shall be necessary to form any portion of said foundation (of the sewer) of concrete, said concrete shall be paid for as extra work at the price per cubic yard mentioned in the contract." This language forms the foundation of the principal attack made by appellant. He insists that, under the authority of Bolton v. Gilleran,
In awarding a contract for street work it is quite apparent, since the surface of the ground is exposed, that there may be an accurate predetermination of the amount and character of material to be used. It is unnecessary, therefore, to delegate any discretion in this matter to the street superintendent. Such was the condition in Perine v. City of Pasadena,
2. Objection is made that the specifications provided that the city engineer, and not the superintendent of streets, should determine whether any, and, if so, how much, concrete should be used for the artificial foundation. But the contract provides that the work shall be done under the direction and to the satisfaction of the street superintendent, thus following the provisions of the Vrooman Act, and the city engineer, under charter amendment No. 7 of the charter of Santa Barbara (Stats. 1905, p. 937), is required "to make all surface inspections and estimates required by the council." It was therefore not improper to delegate this discretion to the city engineer. After the exercise of the city engineer's discretion in the matter, the work must still be inspected and approved and the assessment issued by the street superintendent.
3. Under the views above expressed it matters not that the court refused to strike out the allegation of the complaint to the effect that no extra concrete for foundation was in fact used. *210
4. The specifications called for "a lamp hole to be placed at the point indicated on plans and profile." The plans, profile and resolution called for six lamp holes, and these lamp holes were in fact constructed. We cannot agree with counsel that this trifling imperfection in the use of the singular for the plural, by which, with the reference to the plans, no one could be misled, produces such an inconsistency as to deprive the council of jurisdiction to order the work.
5. It is complained that the posted notices of intention were not such as the law contemplates. Herein it is not contended that they did not contain all that the law required, but the somewhat singular contention is made that they contain more than the law required, in that the resolution of intention was printed in full, instead of being given in substance, with a reference to the resolution "for further particulars." Something also is urged as to the smallness of the type in which the body of the notice was printed.
A copy of the notice is inserted in the transcript. It is sufficiently legible, and the property-owner cannot be heard to complain with justness because the notice itself conveys to him more information than the law requires that it should.
Defendant was the owner of all of the lots against which the liens were sought to be enforced in a single action. While the method of procedure is permissible under section 12 of the Vrooman Act, yet a single attorney's fee only can be recovered in such an action. (Hughes v. Alsip,
The judgment is modified by striking therefrom all but one award for attorney's fees and costs, and, as so modified, the judgment and the order appealed from will stand affirmed.
Shaw, J., Lorigan, J., Angellotti, J., Sloss, J., Melvin, J., and Beatty, C.J., concurred.
Rehearing denied. *211