167 P. 593 | Or. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the court.
“The trial court found in favorr'of the respondent and against the appellant on all the material issues. Its findings are embodied in formal findings of fact,*232 which, substantially follow the allegations of the complaint and, for that reason, are omitted from the appellant’s abstract.”
The findings should have been made a part of the record; and, yet, while we disclaim any intention of approving the practice followed in the instant case, we shall proceed to examine the questions presented by the litigants. Our inquiry will be made, however, in the light of the explanation of the parties that the findings follow the allegations of the complaint.
The complaint charges that the city was negligent because: (1) It did not use reasonable diligence in supplying special funds for the payment of the warrants; and (2) such moneys as were in the special funds were wrongfully applied in payment of the Warren Construction Company warrants. The defendant denies the accusation of negligence and claims that: (1) It was damaged because Morris failed to perform his duty as engineer; (2) the commencement of the first action operated as an election of remedies and forever precluded Morris from availing himself of any other remedy; (3) the indebtedness limitation prescribed by the charter bars the prosecution of the action; and (4) since the bank held all the warrants, no injury could have resulted by paying one warrant in preference to another.
“Whenever any lot or part thereof sold under the provisions of this charter shall bring less than the assessment thereon, the common council shall supply the deficiency out of the general fund, if in the opinion of the council such improvement is necessary. ’ ’
It is not. necessary to determine whether Section 86 contemplates that the council can transfer moneys from the general fund to a special fund when the indebtedness exceeds the limit fixed by the charter; nor need we ascertain whether the words “shall supply the deficiency” mean “may supply the deficiency”; but it is sufficient to say that the charter does not compel the council to ascertain-whether the paving was necessary; and since the council has not expressed the opinion that the paving was necessary it follows that, even though it be assumed that the charter permits it, there is no obligation to supply the deficiency out of the general fund.
The city employed every means afforded to it by its charter to raise the special funds contemplated by the parties; it left nothing undone; and, indeed, in the language used by the plaintiff in his initial pleading
“tiie defendant has wholly exhausted all means provided by the charter of said defendant City of Sheridan for the collection of said special assessments against the abutting property for the creation of said special fund.”
Neither the charter nor any ordinance prohibited the municipality from selling delinquent property for less than the amount of an assessment. The defendant was not negligent in the creation of the special funds.
“negligently paid warrants subsequent in date and order to the aforesaid warrants of the plaintiff, well knowing that said warrants so paid ahead of the warrants of the plaintiff were the property of persons other than the plaintiff”;
and it is to be presumed that the court made a finding in accordance with the allegations of the complaint as stated by the parties. There was evidence to support such a finding, and, hence, it will not be necessary to make further inquiry into the question of fact. By paying the Warren Construction Company warrants the city exhausted every one of the eight special funds with the result that the company received payment on all its warrants, while Morris only received part payment for work done on four streets and no payment at all for work done on the remaining four streets.
Other questions are discussed in the briefs but it is sufficient to say that we have examined them and conclude that the judgment should be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Affirmed. Rehearing Denied.