22 Or. 106 | Or. | 1892
This is an action to recover on a quantum meruit for work and labor alleged to have been performed by plaintiff, in grading, cutting, and filling one of defendant’s streets, known as Margaretta avenue. This is the second appeal in this case. For the purposes of this appeal, the facts sufficiently appear in the case as reported (20 Or. 379), except from this record it appears that plaintiff by his written contract was to grade Margaretta avenue, a public street of the defendant, to the grade established by the city, as surveyed and established by Hulbert & McQuinn, and according to a profile made by them and made a part of the contract, the work to be done under the supervision of the committee on streets and public property, who should furnish the contractor with all necessary heights and distances, for which work he was to receive, on the approval in writing of the committee on streets and public property and engineer in charge, a certain rate per cubic yard for
The evidence tended to show that plaintiff proceeded to perform his contract, the engineer in charge setting stakes along the line of the.work, giving the height as established by the defendant and provided in the contract. After he had finished grading according to the stakes set by the engineer, and was ready for laying sidewalk and planking, the engineer made a change in the grade stakes of from three to ten inches of a rise in the grade, the entire length of the street, and directed plaintiff to bring the surface of the street up to this line. Plaintiff complained to the mayor and two members of the council of the action of the engineer in changing the grade, and was by the mayor told “to go ahead and finish his work according to the engineer’s instructions, and quit his complaining or he would not get paid for his work, or something to that effect”; that he did finish the work according to the instructions of the engineer, and was compelled to do four hundred and sixty-six dollars and twenty cents worth of work more than called for in his contract and the estimates accompanying the same; that he told one member of the council and the mayor that if they did not rectify the mistake there would be damages claimed, and on the day the street committee was examining the work after its completion he told them he should sue defendant for damages; that after the work was completed, the defendant accepted and paid for all the work provided in the contract, but refused to pay for any extra work as ordered by the engineer. It does not appear that the council as an official body authorized or assented to the change in the contract or street grade by the engineer, or directly ratified the same; nor does it appear that the common council directed or had knowledge that the plaintiff was doing the extra work, or knew that it had been done at the time the
The errors complained of are in the giving and refusal of certain instructions by the trial court. The instruction requested by plaintiff and refused by the court, the refusal of which we held to be an error on the former appeal, to the effect that if the extra work was ordered by the engineer and performed by plaintiff under the direction of the mayor and two members of the council, and the city, acting through its proper officers, accepted the same, the defendant is liable, was in substance given in the general charge, the court adding an explanation in the opinion proper and necessary to a clear understanding by the jury, as to who are the proper officers and how they must act in order to hind the city, and therefore requires no further consideration here. On this point the former decision was, that if the work was performed in improving the streets of defendant without regular authority, by direction of some person assuming to act for it, and was afterwards accepted by defendant, this would be a ratification and equivalent to an original authority. But as to what would constitute an acceptance of the work, was not in the case, nor considered or decided by the court. The record then before us showed “that when said work (extra work) was completed, as ordered by the city surveyor, the same was accepted by the city of Albina,” so that the only question was, whether under such a state of facts the city was liable for the reasonable value of the work.
But on the second trial the question of acceptance was the vital point in the case, and it was therefore proper and necessary for the court to instruct the jury fully upon this
When this contract was signed and executed, no officer of defendant had any authority to change its provisions unless expressly authorized by the common council. That body alone, or some one duly authorized by it, was competent to change the terms of the contract or the grade of the street. The duty of the engineer was to see that the terms of the contract were complied with and the street brought to the grade as provided therein, and for that purpose and that alone he was the agent of the city. But when he assumed to change the grade as established by the city he was doing an unauthorized act, and one in no way binding upon the defendant. The change made by him was a material one, raising the surface of the street from three to ten inches above that established by the city, and if valid, impnRp.fl upon the defendant a liability for four hundred and sixty-six dollar’s worth of work in excess of its contract, and that without its assent. If such an act be valid and binding on the defendant, there is but little protection for municipal corporations against the unauthorized acts of subordinate agents.
It was argued that the act of the individual members of the council in assenting to the change of the grade and directing the plaintiff to complete the work according to the instructions of the surveyor is binding upon the defendant, and the opinion upon the former appeal is relied on as the law of this case. As to every point presented and decided by this court in the former case, the decision becomes the law of the case, binding upon both the parties and this court so far as the same state of facts
The opinion of the chief justice must be read with reference to the question actually before the court, and the admissions and statements in the record, and when so read the doctrine contended for by plaintiff finds no support therein. It is an elementary principle that the affairs of a corporate body, private or municipal, can be transacted only at a corporate meeting, regularly convened, and that the acts of the individual members in no way bind the corporation. The only existence of the common council of a municipal corporation is as a board, “ and they can do no valid act except as a board, and such act must be by ordinance or resolution, or something equivalent thereto.” (1 Dil. Mun. Corp. 455; 15 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 1028; Dey v. Jersey City, 4 C. E. Green, 412; Butler v. Charlstown, 7 Gray, 12; Stoystown etc. Road Co. v. Craver, 45 Pa. St. 386; In re St. Helens Mill Co. 3 Saw. 88; Zottman v. San Francisco, 20 Cal. 96; 81 Am. Dec. 96; Gaswiler v. Willis, 23 Cal. 11; 91 Am. Dec. 607.)
The contract with plaintiff was formally entered into by the authority of the common council of defendant, and if a change were desired, it could only be made by the same parties that made the contract,—the common council or its authorized agent on one side and plaintiff on the other. Declarations or agreements of one or more, or even all of the councilmen, not at an official meeting, that they would be willing to consent to a change in the grade and allow plaintiff extra pay for the increased work, do not
Nor can any inference of acceptance or ratification be deduced from the acts of the council in accepting or paying for the work performed under the written contract. This
It is urged that the court erred in holding that the-knowledge that plaintiff made some claim for extra work,, obtained by individual members of the council, on the-street, would not bind them when they came to vote upon-the resolution offered, to accept the work performed under the contract with plaintiff, unless the plaintiff made such claim at the time the resolution was under consideration. In support of this contention, reliance is had upon the language of the court in the former opinion, that “two of the members of the council and the mayor who authorized the work, had knowledge of their own acts in directing the work to be done, and when they met and accepted it, it is difficult to see why the city was not thereby rendered liable.”' It will be observed that this statement is also based upon the fact that the work was accepted by the council at an official meeting; and it was held that having so accepted the extra work, the defendant was liable without any formal resolution authorizing or ratifying the act
The judgment of the court below is therefore affirmed.