20 Colo. 84 | Colo. | 1894
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action is in the nature of an assumpsit upon an implied contract; The complaint contains no agreement or promise as to the price to be paid by the defendant city for the water furnished to it by the plaintiff company; but it is contended that from the facts alleged the law implies a promise on the part of the city to pay plaintiff a reasonable price for the water actually furnished and delivered.
The general rule is, that to create a liability against a municipality by contract, the contract must be express. 1 Dillon, Mun. Corp. (4th ed.) see. 461. The exceptions to this rule need not now be discussed, since in this action an exjoress provision of the charter is relied upon to protect defendant from liability. The charter in force at the time the water was furnished as alleged in the complaint, provided as follows: “Neither the'city council nor any officer of the city shall have the authority to make any contract, or do anything binding the city7-, or imposing upon the city any liability to pay money, until a definite amount of money shall have been appropriated for the liquidation of all pecuniary liability under said contract, or in consequence thereof, and the amount of said appropriation shall be the maximum limit of the liability of the city under any such contract, or in consequence thereof; said contract to be ab initio null and void, as to the city, for any other or further liability.” See Session Laws, 1885, p. 106, sec. 8 of art. 6.
Persons dealing with a municipal corporation must at their peril take notice, not only of the powers vested in the corporation, but of the mode by which its powers are to be exercised so far as such mode is mandatory. 1 Dillon, Mun. Corp. (4th ed.) sec. 449.
In support of plaintiff’s claim great reliance is placed upon the case of Argenti v. City of San Francisco, 16 Cal. 256, and also upon the case of Nelson v. Mayor, 63 N. Y. 535. Of these cases Mr. Justice Folger, delivering the unanimous opinion of the court of appeals of New York, said:
“ In those two cases the way was open for implying a promise to pay what the property was worth, if with no disregard of statute law, such an implication was admissible ; that is to say, there was in those cases, so far as appears from the facts, no express inhibition upon the city that it should not incur a liability save by an express contract. Here there is an express legislative inhibition upon the city, that it may not incur liability unless by writing and by record. How can it be said that a municipality is liable upon an implied promise, when the very statute which continues its corporate life and gives it its powers, and prescribes the mode of the exercise of them, says that it shall not, and hence cannot, become liable, save by express promise ? ” See McDonald v. Mayor, 68 N. Y. 28; also, Smith v. City of Newburgh, 77 N. Y. 130; and McCoy v. Briant, 53 Cal. 247.
The language of the New York court, above quoted, is peculiarly appropriate to the case at bar. Here we have an
The district court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint. Its judgment ■ must accordingly be affirmed.
Affirmed.