34 Mich. 201 | Mich. | 1876
The relator, it appears, entered into a contract with the city of Detroit to do certain paving at a stipulated price and within a stipulated time. A portion of the paving was done, and some labor performed and materials furnished for the remainder, when the common council, under a right reserved in the contract, declared it forfeited for failure in performance within the time agreed. For that portion of the paving which was completed the relator was paid, and a further sum of five hundred and sixty dollars was paid, which the council appear to have conceded that the relator ought to be allowed from the general fund of the city. The council also passed a resolution that the city engineer be directed to make an assessment “to pay the unliquidated claim.” Nothing appears to have been done under this resolution, and a writ of man- ■ damus is prayed to compel the common council “ to make: and levy said assessment, or that it may be commanded to allow and pay the balance” remaining due to the relator.
To show that there is a balance remaining due, the relator shows that the council subsequently relet the work to another
. The conclusion is a somewhat violent one. Admitting that the city has had the benefit of some of the relator’s labor and materials, it does not follow that it should pay therefor all that was saved by the second contract. Tho second contract is not shown to have been the same as the first, and we have no information concerning the circumstances under which it was made, except that it was to complete the paving for which the relator had contracted. Many circumstances might render it equitable that tho relator should be charged for damages sustained by the city from the failure to complete the. work as agreed, and the question of qucmtimi meruit is not one which can be settled on an imperfect presentation like this. Neither is this the tribunal for the trial of such a question. This court may compel a municipal corporation to make • provision for a liquidated demand, but mandamus does not lie to compel the payment, of that which is unsettled, and in respect to which the respondent is entitled to a trial in the usual manner.
The writ must be denied, with costs.