35 Mich. 22 | Mich. | 1876
Koehler brought an action of assumpsit against the township to recover the value of certain iron, furnished to be used in the construction of a bridge, under a written agreement made with one of the commissioners of highways of said township.
Several questions were raised and discussed relating, first, to the authority of said commissioners of highways to authorize
1. In Moser v. White, 29 Mich., 60, it was said that “every essential proceeding in the course of a levy of taxes must appear in some written and permanent form in the records of the bodies authorized to act upon them. Such a thing as a parol levy of taxes is not legally possible under our laws.” While, therefore, there should be proper written evidence on file or of record, showing that the requisite statutory preliminary requirements to a legal meeting had been complied with, and showing that such a meeting had been held, and the proceedings thereof, courts should bear in mind that, either from a lack of experience or otherwise, it frequently happens that the persons whose duty it is to give notice of and keep a record of such meetings, fail to keep the files and records of their office in a clear and intelligible manner, and that to require the utmost strictness in this respect would result in many cases in rendering void the proceedings of such quasi corporations; their proceedings, therefore, should be liberally construed and all proper intendments made in favor of their regularity.— Cooley on Taxation, 246-7.
2. It did not appear of record that the board of highway commissioners had authorized Cuthbertson, one of their number, to make the contract under which the iron was furnished, or to superintend the building of the bridge. The township clerk is by statute made the clerk of the board of highway commissioners, and required under their direction to record their proceedings. It has, however, frequently been held that while parol evidence could not be admitted to contradict the record, yet that it might be introduced to show facts omitted
3. As to ratification, there may in certain cases be a ratification by the corporation of an unauthorized contract. It must, however, in such cases appear that the contract was one which could in the first instance have been legally entered into by the corporate authorities. And while there may be cases where knowledge that work is being performed for the use and benefit of a corporation under an unauthorized contract, and the corporation afterwards accepts and makes use of the work done, would amount to a ratification; yet this is not one of that class of cases. The fact that the people of the township made use of the bridge when traveling upon the public highway would not be an acceptance, and cannot be so construed. If this were so, then a party placing an unauthorized structure over or on a public highway could thus compel the people to either pay for the same or abandon the use of the highway entirely, lest such use could be construed into an acceptance and liability to *pay.— Wilson v. School
4. The question still remains, was the contract in this case one which the board .could have authorized or ratified without a vote of the people under § 752 et seq., 1 Comp. D. § 1S06 provides that if any bridge over any stream intersected by a highway in any township in this state has been injured or destroyed by the occurrence of a freshet or from any other cause, it shall be the duty of the highway commissioners of such township, on application, etc., to proceed with all convenient dispatch to repair or reconstruct such bridge, as the case may require, under the personal supervision of one of their number, or by letting a contract therefor, under existing provisions of law, provided that a majority of the commissioners shall, after a personal examination, determine that the public interests and convenience require such repairs to be made, or that such bridge ought to be rebuilt, and provided also that the sum to be expended shall not in any one year exceed one thousand dollars. There are other provisions giving the commissioners the care and superintendence of bridges over streams intersecting highways, but it is unnecessary to refer to them in detail. The contract in this case is one apparently within the general powers of the board. A third party entering into such a contract with one of the commissioners has a right to ^assume that the contract is, in fact as in appearance, a proper one. So long, therefore, as the contract does not upon its face show that it is one
As the rulings of the court below were inconsistent with what has been here said, the judgment must be reversed, with costs, and a new trial granted.