70 Wash. 152 | Wash. | 1912
This is a suit to recover an alleged balance due upon a street improvement contract. At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, the case was'withdrawn from the jury and a judgment of dismissal and for costs was entered. Plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.
The contract provides, that the improvement shaljl be made under the superintendence of the street committee of the city council and subject to its acceptance and approval; that the improvement shall not be deemed completed until the city council shall have filed with the city clerk a statement, signed by a majority of them, to the effect that it has been completed; that
“No bonds or warrants shall be issued in any event for any part of said thirty (30) per cent so reserved until said party of the second part shall have filed with the city clerk a certificate signed by the city engineer stating that said period of thirty days has elapsed and no uncompleted or defective work has been discovered for which the city makes claim; nor until the contractor shall have purchased the bonds issued to cover the cost of list of owners, engineering and advertising to the amount of the fixed estimate, and shall have paid the par value thereof, in coin, into said local improvement fund, district No. 14, in the city treasury. It is hereby expressly provided that any warrants which shall be issued to the contractor in the amount of eight hundred and no-100 dollars, in payment of the fixed estimate for list of owners, engineering and advertising expenses incident to this improvement shall be by him properly endorsed, made payable to, and delivered to the city clerk for the transfer by him to the proper funds to meet said expenses, and the contractor for this improvement shall have no claim to any portion of the warrants issued in payment of said fixed estimate, except' to endorse and deliver them as herein provided.”
The specifications, which were expressly made a part of the contract, provide that the concrete shall be mixed by hand labor, that the city engineer may make such alterations
The respondent is a city of the third class, and its government is vested in a mayor and city council composed of seven members. Rem. & Bal. Code, § 7672. The minute book of the city shows that, on December 7, 1910, at a regular meeting of the council, the improvement was “accepted on report of the city engineer of its final completion,” and that the minute was read and approved at a regular meeting of the council on December 21. The parol testimony is that the city engineer was present at the meeting of December 7 and recommended the acceptance of the improvement; that later the incoming mayor appointed the city council “as a committee of the whole” to go with the appellant and the city engineer and inspect the work and report their findings; that they did inspect it in the presence of such parties and a Mr. Stebbins who had been inspector for the city while the work was in progress, and that each member of the council then signed a certificate stating that the improvement was accepted. Other witnesses said that the acceptance was signed by a majority of the council and a majority of the street committee. This acceptance was presented to "the city coun
The respondent contends that there can be no recovery, (1) because of the failure of the appellant to pay the amount of the fixed charges into the local improvement fund for the redemption of the warrants', as provided in the contract; (2) because the evidence shows that the concrete was mixed by a machine instead of by hand labor; (3) because the improvement was not accepted by the street committee; and (4) because the evidence is not clear and convincing that the city engineer acted arbitrarily or capriciously or in bad faith.
The first two contentions will be considered together. It is well settled that, in the absence of fraud, an acceptance of a public improvement by the governing body or by the party authorized by the charter, ordinance, or contract to accept it, is conclusive upon both parties. 1 Abbott, Municipal Corporations, § 288; Lake Erie & W. R. Co. v. Walters, 13 Ind. App. 275, 41 N. E. 465; Whitefield v. Hippie, 11 Ky. Law 386, 12 S. W. 150; Atkinson v. Davenport, 117 Iowa 687, 84 N. W. 689; Central Bitulithic Paving Co. v. Mt. Clemens, 143 Mich. 259, 106 N. W. 888; City Street Imp. Co. v. Marysville, 155 Cal. 419, 101 Pac. 308, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 317. The respondent had the right and power to waive a strict compliance with the terms of the contract. Lake Erie & W. R. Co. v. Walters, supra; Weston v. Syracuse, 158 N. Y. 274, 53 N. E. 12, 70 Am. St. 472, 43 L. R. A. 678; 28 Cyc. 1054k.
The respondent has cited De Mattos v. Jordan, 20 Wash. 315, 55 Pac. 118, and Atwood v. Smith, 64 Wash. 470, 117 Pac. 393. In the De Mattos case the single question involved was whether an oral approval of the work by the architect was sufficient. It was held that the contract contemplated that his written certificate should be obtained prior to the
The evidence shows that the cement was mixed in a machine designed for that purpose, and that it is a better and more modem method than hand mixing. The area of the work was small, and the inspector employed by the city was giving his entire attention to a supervision of the work. The method of mixing the cement was apparent to both the inspector and the engineer, and a reasonable attention to their duties required them to reject the concrete before it became a part of the solid body of the improvement if the method of mixing was not satisfactory. Their failure to do so was clearly an acquiescence in the method pursued.
The third contention is equally wanting in merit. The “street committee of the city council,” as it is called in the contract, was appointed by the council for its own convenience. Obviously the body that created it could either disregard it or act independently of it.
In respect to the last contention, it suffices to say that we have uniformly held that it is the duty of an architect or an engineer who has been selected by the parties to a contract to determine when the contract has been completed, to exercise his honest judgment on the matters submitted to him. He cannot arbitrarily, or capriciously, or in bad faith,' refuse to certify to the truth, and thus prevent a party • from having the compensation which he has earned. Craig v. Geddis, 4 Wash. 390, 30 Pac. 396; Schmidt v. North Yakima, 12 Wash. 121, 40 Pac. 790; School District No. 5 v. Sage, 13 Wash. 352, 43 Pac. 341; McKivor v. Savage, 60 Wash. 135, 110 Pac. 811; Skagit County v. Trowbridge, 25 Wash. 140, 64 Pac. 901.
The evidence tends strongly to show that the engineer withheld his certificate because the appellant refused to bear the burden of the formei*’s errors.
Mount, Chadwick, Parker, and Crow, JJ„ concur.