186 Ky. 124 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1919
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
The appellants, Staebler & Gregg, under what we assume, that they supposed to be a contract with the town of Anchorage, a town of the sixth class, made certain improvements upon a street, in the town, and furnished materials, therefor, and thereafter, before the completion of the contract, according to its terms, the town repudiated the actions of its officials, or such of them, as purported to make the contract, and refused to permit the appellants to proceed further. The appellants instituted this action to recover, of the town, the value of the work and materials, to the extent, that they had done work- and furnished materials in the performance of the alleged contract, and, also, to recover certain personal property or its value, which they alleged, that they were the owners of, and of which the town had taken possession.
A motion, by the town, to require appellants to make their petition more specific, having been overruled, the appellee, town, filed an -answer, the first paragraph of which was a traverse of the averments of the petition, and the second paragraph attempted to set up a counter
It will be assumed, that any averments in the original and first amended petition, which are contradictory of those embraced in the last amended petition, were abandoned by the appellants, as the last amended petition appears to contain a complete statement of their cause of action, and a statement of the actual facts, upon which their action is, based, and for the purposes -of decision, it will be unnecessary to consider anything, except the facts averred, in their last amended petition and the relief there sought. From it, the facts upon which their cause of action is based, at least so far as the allegations of the pleadings extend, are substantially as follows: the appellee is a town of the sixth class; the appellants are partners; the board of trustees of appellee enacted an ordinance, by which it ordained, the improvement and reconstruction of Railroad avenue, between Thompson and Johnson avenues, and that the costs of such reconstruction, should be paid out of the general funds of the town, and in accordance with the ordinance, the appellee caused plans and specifications of the work to be done and ma
The writing, alleged to he a contract between appellants and appellee, recites, that whereas the appellee had advertised for bids for the construction of the street, in accordance with plans and specifications prepared by engineers, in the employ of appellee, and Whereas the appellants were the lowest and best bidders and had submitted their proposal or hid in writing, and the writing, containing the bid, is attached to the contract and made
Several grounds are urged, upon which it is contended, that the petition as amended, does not state, a cause of action, upon which appellants are entitled to recover, but it is not necessary to consider more than one. If the appellants did not have a contract with the town, by which they legally were authorized to do the work and furnish the materials, sued for, and which obligated the town to pay for same, when performed and furnished, they have no right of recovery, in any event. In the light of the fact, that a municipal corporation is a creature of the law, and that the power of the board of" trustees of a town of the sixth class to legislate or to make contracts is all derived from the provisions of the statute laws, which constitute the charters of municipalities of that class, it scarcely seems necessary to say, that in order for it, or any of its officers to make a contract, which will be binding upon the municipality, that it must confine its attempts to contract, to the subjects over which it has power by virtue of the statutes, and must proceed in the making of contracts, in the manner prescribed by its-charter provisions. Contracts, made by boards of trustees of such towns which are in violation of their charter provisions, and which they do not make in the manner prescribed by same, and attempts at contracts made by
“In the erection, improvement and repair of all public buildings and works, in all streets and sewer work, and in all work, in and about streams, bays, or water fronts, or in or about embankments or other works for protection against overflow and in furnishing any supplies or materials for the same, when the expenditure, required for the same, exceeds the sum of one hundred dollars, the same shall be done by contract and shall be let to the lowest responsible bidder, after due notice,*131 under such regulations as may be prescribed by ordinance.”
Hence, it will be observed, that when the board of trustees of a town of the sixth class proposes to improve or repair a street, and the expenditure, for the same for work or materials, exceeds the sum of $100.00, it must enact an ordinance providing.for the improvement, and for letting the work, or furnishing materials for the same, to the lowest bidder, and entering into a contract with such bidder, and there must be due notice of the letting, so that persons,' desiring to bid, may have an opportunity to do so. A valid contract for such a work, can not be entered into, unless these express requirements of the charter, be observed, and neither the board of trastes nor other officer of the municipality can ignore these requirements, and make a contract, which will be a contract of the municipality. The appellants do not set out the provisions of the ordinance, in their pleadings, but assuming, that they were sufficient to legally ordain the work to be done, and the materials to be furnished for the improvement, and the notice of the letting was sufficient, to the persons desiring to bid, and that the bid of appellants was in accordance with the ordinance, and was the “lowest responsible” bid, and that the ordinance provided for the acceptance of the bid and authorization of the chairman of the board to execute the contract, yet, the board of trustees did not accept the bid made in writing to the board under the ordinance which required the work and furnishing of the materials to be submitted to competitive bidding, but, changed the contract, which was proposed to be let to the lowest bidder, “after due notice, ’ ’ under the ordinance, by eliminating from it, the construction of the sidewalk and the costs of same, which they did without the enactment of any ordinance, and directed the chairman of the board to execute a contract for the work proposed, after eliminating the sidewalk. There is no allegation of the appellants’ pleadings, which avers, that the provisions of the ordinance were such, as to authorize the board of trustees to accept the appellants’ bid for any less than the whole of the work and materials, which was submitted to competitive bidding. If it should be conceded however, that the action of the board of trustees was witmin its authority, the contract which was entered into between appellants and the chairman of
The demurrer to the first paragraph of the petition as amended, must be affirmed.
As to the second paragraph of the petition, as amended, when the illegal contract, sued on, was repudiated and appellants required to discontinue operations under it, it is clear, that the town was without right to seize or appropriate their personal property, which had not been appropriated by them to the invalid contract, and rely upon the contract to keep it, and at the same time, deny the existence of the contract and resist its'performance. The contract being invalid, it gave the town no right to the piping and tiles, sued for, and which may have been left by appellants upon the .ground' in the street. If it seized such personal property of appellants, without any more right, than the invalid contract gave it, and appropriated it to its use or sold or destroyed it, the appellants are entitled to recover damages for such tortious act, the measure of which is the reasonable value of the property, when converted or sold' or destroyed. If the town has not converted the property to its use, but, still has same in its possession, the appellants may recover the specific articles, or their value, with damages for their detention. The town is however responsible only for its acts, which are done in its corporate capacity, and through its properly authorized agencies. The paragraph, however, fails to state a cause of action for tortious conversion, or a cause of action for a recovery of the articles, or their value, as- it neither alleges, a wrongful conversion, nor in fact, any disposition of the property by the town, nor a wrongful detention of it. The averment of appellants being that the. town took the personal prop
The judgment is therefore affirmed.