14 Or. 3 | Or. | 1886
The respondent is a private corporation, and the appellant a municipal corporation. The former began an action in the lower court against the latter, to recover the contract price for building a certain bridge, or elevated roadway, in said city. The city in the outset contracted with one J. E. Bennett to do the work, and the respondent alleged in its complaint that Bennett, after furnishing materials and performing labor, assigned his claim to the respondent; that the appellant, the city, recognized the respondeút as a party to the contract in the place of Bennett, and that thereafter the respondent and appellant, by mutual agreement, so modified the contract that by the terms thereof, as so modified, the respondent was to furnish and put into said roadway, in addition to what had at that time been put into the same, four bents, which are described in the complaint; and that upon the completion of the work required by the terms of the contract, as so modified, the appellant was to pay the respondent the sum of $5,042 therefor ; and further alleged in its complaint that it had duly performed all the conditions on its part to be performed of said contract, as so modified, and demanded judgment against said appellant for said sum of $5,042.
The appellant interposed an answer to the complaint, admitting certain formal parts thereof ; also, that it and one J. E. Bennett entered into a contract, by the terms of which
Two important questions were discussed at the hearing. One of them was, whether the action could be maintained against the appellant, to recover the contract price for doing the work in any event; and the other one was, whether it could be maintained until the work had been approved and accepted upon the part of the appellant. The ordinary mode of improving streets in the city of East Portland, under its charter, after the publication of the notice of the intended improvement, is to ascertain and determine the probable cost of making the improvement, and assess upon each lot or part thereof, abutting upon the same, its proportionate share of such cost. The board of trustees is then required to declare the same by ordinance, and to direct its clerk to enter a statement thereof in the docket ' of city liens. From the date of such entry the sum entered,.1 is deemed a tax levied thereon, and provision is made for itqf collection. This seems to have been the only mode by which the expenses for the improvement of a street could be raised. The city had no arbitrary power to order the improvement of a street. It could only proceed in that direction upon the implied assent of a majority of the lot owners whose lots abutted upon the portion of the street to be improved, and its authority in that particular is specifically pointed out in its charter. It can make no contract for the improvement, except in the manner indicated. The improvement is supposed to be a benefit to the lot owners referred to, and the lots affected are charged with the cost of making it. The city occupies the relation in the proceeding more of an agent than a principal. It does not undertake to pay the contract price for making the improvement out of the general funds of the city. I do not think it has any power to enter into any such engagement for
The main contest at the trial of the case seems to have been, that the action could not be maintained at all; that the respondent’s remedy was against the officers of the city, to compel them to issue the warrant upon the special fund, in payment of the contract price for making the improvement; and counsel for the appellant contended upon the hearing in favor of that view, and cited authorities from other states sustaining it; but there are other authorities that hold to the view herein indicated, that a general liability will attach in case the city fails to observe the various requirements of the charter by which the fund is realized, and this court must have adopted that view in Frush v. City of East Portland, supra, and I think we will be compelled to adhere to it. The appellant denied that the respondent had performed the contract, and that raised a material issue in the case ; and, had it been maintained by the appellant, it would have been a complete defense ; but the jury seems to have determined otherwise, and
The respondent set up in its complaint a modified contract, and counted upon such contract. I am quite certain that this would have been fatal to its recovery in the action, if it were shown by the pleadings that the original contract had been changed in any material particular, and that its performance did not amount to a performance of the original contract. Such a contract can no more be modified by changing a material part of the original, than a new one could be made without a compliance with the charter. The respondent’s attorneys apparently tried to plead themselves out of coui’t, but the attorneys for the appellant came to their rescue. They denied that the original contract had been modified, and it is impossible to determine from the pleadings that any material stipulation therein was waived or materially altered. And we must, after verdict, presume in favor of the judgment.
The second question seems to have occurred to the appellant’s counsel at the hearing. It appears from the answer and exhibits that the improvement was not to be paid for by the appellant until its approval and acceptance, either by the board of trustees or by other of its officers ; and .this is not denied in the reply, but it is alleged in the reply “ that said roadway or structure was completed by the plaintiff (respondent) in accordance with the terms of said modified contract, on or before the 15th day of August, 1884, at which time and ever since the defendant (appellant) and its common council had due notice and full knowledge of such completion, and that it was at the time of its completion, ever since had been, and still was, a better, stronger and more substantial structure than that provided for or contemplated by the original con
If several of the propositions of law discussed were available on this record, I should be for a reversal. But as the case stands, I do not see how I can do otherwise than, concur in the result reached.