91 F. 833 | 7th Cir. | 1899
after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
We are of opinion that the decree under review rests upon an erroneous theory. The contract which the court ordered annulled was made hy parties dealing at arm’s length. The sanitary district stood, in no relation of trust or confidence, and owed no duty, to proposing contractors. The trustees of the district and their chief engineer, it might well be said, were bound in duty to the public to use diligence to obtain such knowledge of the conditions to be dealt with as was necessary to enable them, in letting contracts, to conserve the public interests, but there has been pointed out no provision in the statute whereby the drainage district was created and the powers of its officers defined, which required that information concerning the nature of materials to be excavated should be collected for the benefit of bidders, and for the assertion of such duty on the general principles of law or equity.there is, we believe, no foundation in authority or reason. If conceded, the proposition would mean that every representation made by public officials or trustees, appointed to obtain proposals for the execution of a public work, amounts to a warranty either that the representation is true or that experienced and skillful agents had been employed to obtain the information on which it was made, and that the agents had followed the best known methods and had been guilty of no negligence in the discharge of their duties; or, to say the least, that, if such representations are not to be regarded as warranties, either of the truth of the statements or of due diligence used to make them true, they do demonstrate, if they turn out to be untrue, a mutual mistake of the parties, by reason of which the bidder may abandon his contract, once he' discovers in the course of performance that the representations Were false or mistaken. The books would be searched in vain for precedents or principles to sustain such a doctrine. The possibilities which it would involve of peril to public interests are infinite. It would take from the contractor, and impose on the public, all undiscovered contingencies and risks, which by diligence might have been found out, incident to the construction of public works.
If in this case, the trustees or their engineer were at fault for employing unskilled men to malee the borings in section E, the breach of duty was to the public, as represented by the drainage district, and the appellees had no ground for complaint, even assuming that the profile by which they are said to have been misled had purported, to- give information full and definite enough to justify reliance upon it, unless, by somebody authorized to speak for the district, they were purposely induced to believe that the borings had been skillfully made and tabulated. The bill contains no averment of the lack of skill'or of-negligence on the part of those who were employed to conduct the borings, and it is not pretended that the appellees supposed
We have proceeded thus far on (he assumption that what the engineer said about the profile was in some measure binding, upon
The principles underlying the conclusion already declared are inconsistent with the proposition, in the master’s findings of law, that, while the drainage district was under no obligation to give any information to the complainants touching the character of material likely to be encountered in section F, yet, when it did make and exhibit a profile for the information of bidders, it was bounid in good faith to communicate to them, also, all the information in its possession on the subject, namely, the reports of the Cooley borings, the government borings, and the statements of General Fitz Simons made before the engineering committee of the defendant. The drainage district was represented by its board of trustees, not by the individuals who composed the board, and could be bound by the action of the board, directly or through agents empowered to act or speak for it, but not by the knowledge or conduct of its individual members. It is not material, therefore, that some of the trustees, at the time of the making of the contract with the. appellees, were familiar in a general way with the fact that Gooley, when chief engineer, two years or more before, had made borings, and by his reports had known the results of such borings; or that some of the trustees, two years or more before, had been present and heard the statements of General Fitz Simons to a committee of engineers; or that the certified copy of the
We are also of opinion that if the appellees had the right, on discovery of the intractable material, to repudiate the contract and have 'it set aside, they lost that right by subsequent conduct. The discovery was made in March, 1894, but the prosecution of the work was continued until late in the ensuing October. Eescission, whether upon the ¿round of fraud or mistake, is a right which must be asserted pronlptly, and the excuse set v. for the delay in this case is wholly inadequate. It rests largely on alleged assurances of adjustment given by individual members of the board after that body had declared its puipose to insist upon performance of the contract. Those assurances were in no sense binding on the board, and the appellees had no right to rely upon them. The law required the letting of contracts for excavation to lowest and best bidders. But if the contention of the appellees is right, then for six months they were prosecuting their work without a contract, on the assumption that a new agreement would be made, or that in default thereof they would compel compensation on such terms' as they might be able to show to be just, and meanwhile they were expending large sums for additional machinery (it seems, illadvi'sedly), the use and damage to which are to be included in the accounting ordered. Equity can hardly sanction so bald a violation of uts'familiar rule that one who would rescind a contract must exercise ¡his election at once upon the disclosure of the fraud or mistake which is supposed to justify such action. The proper course for .the ap