139 Wis. 367 | Wis. | 1909
This action was brought by tbe plaintiff in bis own bebalf and in bebalf of all others similarly situated for an injunction against tbe letting of a contract by tbe defendant city to tbe Barber Asphalt Paving Company. Plaintiff is a lotowner abutting on Park avenue, and it is also averred that plaintiff is a general taxpayer in tbe defendant city and that tbe paving of crossings is required to be paid for by tbe city, and that one of tbe aldermen of said city was interested in other paving contracts requiring brick pavement, and between this alderman and tbe Barber Asphalt Paving Company there existed a secret and corrupt agreement for tbe purpose of eliminating competition and securing all tbe contracts for paving to be let by tbe city, tbe profits thereon to be divided between tbe alderman and tbe Barber Asphalt Paving Company. Tbe complaint contains other averments not necessary to be noticed on this appeal. Tbe circuit court made findings of fact with great detail, and such findings are challenged on this appeal as not supported by tbe evidence.
Tbe twenty-third finding of fact is as follows:
“That there is no evidence that any alderman, or any official of said city, has been promised or received from tbe Barber Asphalt Paving Company, or from any person, any rebate or money or corrupt consideration whatever for bis action, or bis vote, or bis influence, in any of tbe matters or proceedings taken by tbe said city, or by the council or by any officer thereof, in and about tbe proposed paving of Park avenue with asphalt, and about tbe paving of any street of said defendant city with asphalt.”
Tbe twenty-fourth finding of fact is as follows:
“That there is no evidence that there was any secret or corrupt, or any, agreement between tbe Barber Asphalt Paving Company and tbe said Dockery mentioned in tbe complaint for the purpose of eliminating or avoiding competition, or for the purpose of securing all, or any, of tbe contracts for paving*370 to be laid by said defendant city, or in relation to any matter, fact, or thing concerned or relating to the proposed paving of Park avenue with asphalt or relating to the paving, or proposed paving, of any street in said defendant city.”
The twenty-eighth finding is as follows:
“That the plaintiff has wholly failed to prove any of the material allegations set out in the complaint not admitted by the answer, and has wholly failed to show any fraud or corruption in, about, or relating to the proceeding for paving Park avenue with asphalt as set out in the complaint.”
Nevertheless the uncontroverted evidence shows that one Dockery was a member of the board of aldermen during the year 1906 and until he resigned on August 20, 1907, and was in 1907 president of the council. In May, 1907, Mr. Dockery, with Michael McCugo and William IT. Bruett, organized a corporation called the McCugo Construction Company, with an authorized capital of $25,000, each taking one third of the stock issued, and this stock was paid for by each putting in $700 in cash and transferring to the company contractors’ equipment, consisting of concrete mixers, shovels, wheelbarrows, and utensils of that kind. A large amount of street improvement was then under consideration by the common council, but not fully decided upon.
The Barber Asphalt Paving Company was a corporation, and had a local agent at Fond du Lac, one Gavin. On J une 5, 1907, the common council adopted a resolution declaring it to be the purpose of the council that Park avenue and Eourth street to Merrill street be improved at the expense of the property to be benefited thereby, by grading the roadway thereof to the established grade, and by constructing thereon an asphalt pavement under five years’ guaranty, together with a Portland cement concrete combined curb and gutter, and directed the board of public works to view the premises and consider and determine the various matters and perform the various duties in said resolution specified. The board of public works, on June 20, 1907, reported that they had, among other
It appears by the oral evidence that in June, 1907, McCugo had a bid also for other contract work on Gillett street. Mc-Cugo informed Dockery that he was going to bid on Gillett street, and asked Dockery to go into the deal because a member of the McCugo Construction Company, but Dockery informed him that being a member of the council he could not participate in any contracts that were to be let by the city, .and absolutely refused to do it. While Dockery was temporarily absent from the city of Fond du Lac McCugo put in a bid for this work on Gillett street in his own name, and the ■contract was awarded to him by the council before Dockery
“Q. Who made the contract for the brick? A. The contract was originally — the contract was made financially by the McCugo Construction Company. Q. The brick contract? A. Yes. Q. Who furnished the brick for Third street ? Was-that in the same contract ? A. Yes.”
Where a street was to be paved partially by asphalt paving and partially by brick paving and all let together in one contract, as was the case on Park avenue and Fourth street, being the contract in question, the McCugo Construction Company could not bid on it or compete with the Barber Asphalt Paving Company, but the Barber Asphalt Paving Company could bid on it because they handled both kinds of work. The witness testified that he made no arrangement with the Barber Asphalt Paving Company that he was to have a share in the work that was being done or to be done in the city of Fond du Lac. And further:
“Q. When you made your bid for the brick work, did you experience difficulty in buying or purchasing brick that could fill the desired specifications? Didn’t all the brick dealers refuse to deal with you ? A. Yes, all except the Barber Asphalt Paving Company. They tried to hold us up. I want to explain that to the court.”
The explanation of Mr. Dockery is that, having found the sellers of paving brick apparently in combination to hold up the price, which fact he ascertained from letters written by him in the name of the McCugo Construction Company, he went to Mr. Gavin, the agent of the Barber Asphalt Paving Company at Fond du Lac, and told him he had these letters from the different manufacturers, and that unless the price of
“Resolved by the mayor and common council of the city of Fond du Lac, that the petition of the property owners of property abutting on Park avenue between Merrill and Fourth streets presented herewith be granted, and that the proceedings heretofore had and taken toward paving the same with asphalt be and they are hereby vacated and set aside and made null and void.”
This resolution was carried. On July 11, 1907, a resolution was presented rescinding this resolution above quoted, and this was carried, and Mr. Dockery informs us that he voted against the passage of the last-mentioned resolution, but his vote was not necessary, and he had secured the reduction upon the price of brick.
“Mr. McCugo was interested in the McCugo Construction Company, had his own capital all tied up there, and through an agreement to buy his material we had contracted for a very large amount of cement, which we had to use, and he was paying a profit on the cement and also a profit on th& stone to the McCugo Construction Company, and I was aiding him financially to carry out the deal as I would aid anybody else.”
He also answered: “I assumed the financing of the Mc-Cugo Construction Company long before I resigned from the council — from the time of its organization.” We have quoted from this testimony at length for the purpose of showing the exact words of the witness in the particulars covered thereby.
McCugo, sworn as a witness, testified that he took the contract on Gillett and Green streets in his own name, that the
It requires an extraordinary stretch of credulity to find the McCugo Construction Company was not interested in this brick paving contract or that Dockery was getting this reduction on the price of brick for the benefit of the public. And the figures tend strongly to show that the public did not get the benefit of it, because, having gotten this reduction of $7 per thousand on paving brick, Mr. McCugo’s bid was at the rate of $2.23 or $2.26 per square yard, depending upon whether he supplied five-inch or six-inch concrete base, and not specifying the kind of brick, while the bid of Rasmussen & Sons Co. was $2.34 per square yard for brick pavement with six-inch concrete foundation and Purington brick, and •■$2.34 per square yard for brick pavement with five-inch concrete foundation and Purington brick, with slightly lower pi-ices for Douville brick and slightly higher for Metropolitan brick. This was a difference of eleven cents per square yard in favor of McCugo’s bid, and in order that the city may be said to have benefit of $7 per thousand reduction upon the price of brick, a thousand of brick would have to pave sixty-three and a fraction square yards, and even at the price mentioned by Dockery as that of the combination before he secured the reduction, namely, $2.56 per square yard, McOugo’s
We think the argumentative conclusions of Dockery have little weight against the undisputed facts. In the foregoing summary we have presented the facts as elicited from Dock•ery, with his statements of motives and his opinions and conclusions. But, taking the case exactly as claimed by Dock•ery, it is as follows: An alderman of the city, after resolutions are passed, proceedings under way, and bids called for ■the paving of a street with asphalt, approaches a bidder, who is also a dealer in brick, informs that bidder that unless he makes a reduction upon the price of brick the alderman will use his influence to prevent letting of the asphalt contract. The alderman then introduces a resolution rescinding the action already taken by the council and changing the proposed pavement from asphalt to macadam pavement. This aider-man is interested as a stockholder in a corporation organized for the purpose of doing street and other construction work. Another member of that corporation contemplates bidding upon other city paving contracts for brick paving of streets and is engaged in street contract work. The construction •corporation in which both are interested pays out the money on the existing contracts of the alderman’s associate. The alderman is financing this corporation, helping it and signing its checks, but the existing contracts are not in its name^ The Barber Asphalt Paving Company, prospective bidder on "the asphalt contract, makes a concession of $7 per thousand to the alderman at his request and upon his threat to use his in-fluence against the letting of contracts for asphalt paving. McCugo, the associate of the alderman, avails himself of this reduction, signs a contract with the Asphalt Paving Company .for the purchase of brick, procures the brick paving contract,
“Any person who shall corruptly give, offer or promise to-any . . . officer ... of any . . . city . . . any gift or gratuity, or any money, goods, thing in action, personal or real property, or anything of value, or any pecuniary or other personal advantage, present or prospective, with intent to influence his vote, opinion, judgment or action upon any question, matter, cause or proceeding which may then be pending or which may by law come or be brought before him in his official capacity, . . . shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison not more than five years nor less than one year, or by fine not exceeding one thousand dollars, nor less than two hundred dollars.” Sec. 4475, Stats. (1898).
If the reduction upon the price of brick made by the Barber Asphalt Paving Company at the request of Dockery was anything of value or any pecuniary or personal advantage present or prospective, it would seem that the transaction above detailed was within the letter and spirit of this statute. The question then arises whether the city, upon learning of • the facts, should have rejected the bid of the Barber Asphalt Paving Company and refused to contract with it. If the city had this power and duty the taxpayer may enforce it.
In State ex rel. Wildman v. Kidd, 63 Wis. 337, 23 N. W. 703, it appeared that the town board of supervisors, being called upon to divide a school district and form therefrom a new school district, met for that purpose and refused to consent to the division unless the new school district should re
“In deciding upon the question of division the town board had no right to be actuated by any motive or consideration other than for the public good. If such division would, in their judgment, be for the public welfare, then they had no moral right to exact a pecuniary consideration from one district to the other as a condition of making it. . . . It is the policy of the law that all who are active in opposition to such division, whether members of the school board or otherwise, as well as all who are active in trying to procure such division, shall act in good faith; and any agreement to combine in opposition to such division, or consent thereto, in consideration of money to be paid, or property or rights of property to be surrendered, is contrary to public policy and therefore void.”
The court cites Howard v. First Ind. Church, 18 Md. 451, where a contract promising to pay an abutting owner for signing a petition to pave a street by reimbursing him the cost over $1.15 per front foot was criticised and its invalidity suggested; Maguire v. Smock, 42 Ind. 1, 13 Am. Rep. 353, where a contract to pay certain abutting owners a sum of money provided they petition the city for a paving improvement was adjudged illegal; Ohio L. I. & T. Co. v. Merchants' I. & T. Co. 11 Humph. 1, 53 Am. Dec. 742, and other cases. See, also, New Haven v. N. H. & D. R. Co. 62 Conn. 252, 25 Atl. 316, where the contract was made at the request of and for the protection of property holders, and it was said:
“That a public officer should regulate his official conduct by considerations of private benefit to himself or to others can never, as we trust, receive the sanction, either express or tacit, of this court.”
In Shelby v. Miller, 114 Wis. 660, 91 N. W. 86, an action was brought on a contract made with the supervisors of the plaintiff town to indemnify the town against the expense of litigation in consideration of being permitted to carry on a litigation for the town relative to the opening of a highway. 'The contract was held to be illegal and void.
In State ex rel. Bosch v. Ryan, 127 Wis. 599, 106 N. W. 1093, the town board of supervisors refused to alter a highway. An appeal was taken to commissioners appointed by the county judge as authorized by statute. The commissioners hesitated about overruling the decision of the supervisors, whereupon one of the parties petitioning for the alteration executed and gave to the commissioners a bond in the sum of '$1,000 running to the town, binding himself to build the road ¡and bridge made necessary by such alteration on or before a ■date therein fixed, and thereupon the commissioners unanimously decided to alter the road as petitioned for and filed their written decision to that effect. The supervisors refused to lay out the road pursuant to that decision, and upon mandamus to compel them so to do the trial court found as matter of fact that the majority of the commissioners were not influenced in their action by the agreement and bond and that their decision was in all respects valid, and awarded the peremptory writ of mandamus. The judgment was reversed in this court and the writ quashed. The court said:
“Highways are only to be laid out when the public good will thereby be promoted. Private considerations or inducement cannot rightly enter into the question in any degree. If private individuals with special interests were allowed to bargain with public officers who are exercising this important*381 and sovereign power, and to offer inducements of any kind tending to influence their free action, the interests of the public would be at once in jeopardy. Not only are such bargains-void as against public policy, but official action based thereon ceases to be based solely upon the public welfare, and becomes tainted with some degree of private interest. . . . The decision is conclusively shown to have been, in part, based upon the fact that the bond had been given. No nice separation of motives is possible. There is safety only in the entire prohibition of such transactions.”
This goes a little further than State ex rel. Curtis v. Geneva, 107 Wis. 1, 82 N. W. 550, but it is to be observed that in the last-mentioned case the contract to contribute money toward the construction of the road was made after the decision of the commissioners and was found not to have induced or procured that decision. See, also, State ex rel. Newell v. Purdy, 36 Wis. 213, and Chippewa Valley & S. R. Co. v. C., St. P., M. & O. R. Co. 75 Wis. 224, 44 N. W. 17. In the last-named case one railroad corporation agreed with another to refrain from making any effort to-procure a land grant from the legislature and to render to the other reasonable and proper assistance in procuring such grant in consideration of receiving from the latter a portion-of the land granted, and the contract was held void.
The following language is cited with approval from Clippinger v. Hepbaugh, 5 Watts & S. 315:
“It matters not that nothing improper was done or was expected to be done by the plaintiff. It is enough that such is the tendency of the contract; that it is contrary to sound morality and public policy, leading necessarily, in the hands of' designing and corrupt men, to improper tampering with members, and the use of an extraneous secret influence over an important branch of the government. It may not corrupt all;, but if it corrupts or tends to corrupt some, or if it deceives or tends to deceive or mislead some, that is sufficient to stamp- • its character with the seal of reprobation before a judicial tribunal.” See, also, Oscanyan v. Arms Co. 103 U. S. 261, 264; Hayward v. Nordberg Mfg. Co. 85 Fed. 4, 29 C. C. A. 438, and eases in note.
The offer of the Barber Asphalt Paving Company to the McCugo Construction Company, made for the purpose of inducing Dockery to withdraw his opposition as a member of the council to their contract with the city, and carried out by concession to the McCugo Construction Company or to Mc-■Cugo, was within the condemnation of the foregoing authorities. The consent of the city, in part purchased by this con-cession, was unlawful and invalid. It is possible that if the contract between the city and the Barber Asphalt Paving •Company was executed and performed the courts would not aid in setting it aside or annulling it, but in an action like this, brought to enjoin in limine the making or entering into by the city of a contract so procured, the law is otherwise. If the city, being informed of the manner in which the Barber Asphalt Paving Company procured the withdrawal of op
It is urged, apparently in extenuation of the acts of Dockery, that there was an unlawful combination for the purpose of raising the price of paving brick and thereby extorting from the city or the abutting owners large sums of money. The foundation for this claim is in some argumentative conclusions of Dockery. But even if such illegal combination •existed there are other remedies and other ways of meeting it than by illegal countermoves on the part of the alderman ■and the bidder. Regarding the nature of the action and the necessity which the plaintiff was laboring under of procuring his evidence from the mouths of those adversely interested, the rulings of the court below were quite erroneous and illiberal, but it is not necessary to review them in detail. The judgment of the court below should be reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to enjoin the execution of the proposed contract on the part of the city.
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment for the plaintiff.
Upon a motion for a rehearing there was a brief for the appellant by II. E. Swett, and separate briefs for the respond
The motion was denied May 11, 1909.