25 Haw. 58 | Haw. | 1919
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
This is an interlocutory appeal from an order and decree of the first judge of the circuit court of the first circuit, sitting in equity, overruling the demurrer of the respondents to the amended bill of the complainant, said amended hill having been filed by leave of court after a demurrer had been sustained to the original bill. The amended bill recites in substance that complainant is the owner in fee of certain premises in the Puiwa district in Honolulu, abutting on Laimi and Park roads, described as lots 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, shown on a corrected map of frontage improvement district number 7, Laimi, Park and Puiwa roads, dated November 26, 1917; that prior to the 17th day of October, 1917, the board of supervisors of the City and County of Honolulu determined
To which bill the respondents filed a demurrer setting forth various causes, a synopsis of which demurrer is as follows: that it affirmatively appears from the copy of the plans and specifications attached to said bill that all the matters of alleged defects set forth in said bill were matters of engineering expert judgment, the application or modification of which, if any,- being wholly in the discretion of the city and county engineer, subject to the approval of the board of supervisors, as shown by various paragraphs (enumerating them) of said specifications; that it does not appear from said bill that there was any actual collusion or fraud on the part of the contractor, the engineer or the board of supervisors or any of them in the administration of said contract-and' specifications; that “no facts are alleged showing alleged maladministration of the contract so gross as to warrant this court taking jurisdiction of said cause and granting any
■The question presented to this court is whether or not this bill alleges sufficient facts to establish the species of fraud necessary to warrant the intervention of a court of equity as prayed and the granting of an injunction as prayed by complainant, and not whether he has sustained an injury or suffered a wrong, the remedy for which would be cognizable in some other court. We shall therefore confine ourselves solely to this issue.
The complainant alleges divers departures on the part of the contractor from the terms and specifications of the contract and also his repeated protests against the manner in which the work was being performed and the terms of the contract violated. These various departures are alleged to have been of such magnitude that the completed contract was substantially different from that en
Tbe acceptance of tbe contract by tbe engineer and board of supervisors must in the absence of fraud be regarded as conclusive upon the complainant. In the case of Lawrence v. City of Portland, 167 Pac. 589, the court says: “It is finally contended that the work was unskilfully done, that tbe provisions of tbe contract were disregarded by the contractor in seven respects, pointed out in tbe complaint, and that, as a result, the street is less desirable than if it had been constructed as required by tbe contract. It is alleged that tbe plaintiffs repeatedly protested as tbe work proceeded, and that notwithstanding these protests tbe street Avas accepted by tbe council. * * Tbe question is no longer an open one in this jurisdiction. * * * Findings of tbe council that the work has been done substantially in accordance with the contract * * are conclusive, in the absence of fraud, unless made under an erroneous principle of law.” In Hendry v. City of Salem, 64 Or. 152, tbe chief justice in delivering tbe opinion of tbe court says: “Tbe principal contention is that tbe improvements made do not corre
No fraud on the part of the board of supervisors or of any city official is disclosed by the bill and while there may have been deviations from the specifications these deviations are not of such a gross nature as to warrant a court of equity in finding that a fraud had been perpetrated by these city officials upon the complainant and as determined by these officials, who are vested with this power and who will have to provide for the maintenance of these roads and will have to appropriate more than one-third of the cost of the improvement, there was a substantial compliance with the contract and specifications thereof, and from a careful consideration of the allegations of the complaint we are unable to discover wherein this judgment was at fault. The facts alleged are in our opinion insufficient to establish fraud of such a nature as would warrant a court of equity in granting the relief prayed upon this ground.
The complainant alleges as a further and additional ground for equitable relief that “the assessment is void because it is an assessment in excess of benefits” and “that the assessment as to him is unconstitutional and
Nor can the allegation that payment was made upon completion and acceptance of the contract by the board of supervisors tend to show that such payment was fraudulent, illegal or prejudicial, nor can an irregularity of this nature, as alleged, be combined with an alleged fraudulent breach of the contract of performance for the purpose of magnifying complainant’s alleged injury. We are of the opinion that the demurrer should have been sustained.
The order appealed from is reversed and the demurrer is sustained.'