The plaintiff does not ask that the money be returned which had been paid for printing done after the contract expired. The only relief demanded is that future payments be restrained. Cases that hold that equity will not compel the repayment of money illegally paid by a municipality where the city has received value for its money throw no light upon the question presented by this appeal. Nor are we aided by those decisions which hold that the courts will not restrain the irregular exercise of power by public officials when its exercise in no way jeopardizes the private rights of the citizen or taxpayer seeking judicial relief.
It clearly appears in this case that the payment restrained would result in an illegal disbursement of the money of the taxpayers of Milwaukee. The illegal disbursement of this money would constitute an invasion of the funds of the city in which each individual taxpayer has a substantial interest, notwithstanding the fact that the payment of this sum would not necessarily result in increased taxation. The fact that the ultimate pecuniary loss to the individual taxpayer may be almost infinitesimal is not controlling. Every taxpayer, great or small, has an interest in the disposition of the funds belonging to the city. “Courts will not stop to balance differences or.to enter into computations to ascer
Whenever a city charter requires public work to be let to the lowest bidder, “it has been uniformly held that the failure to call for bids in the prescribed way ... is fatal to the proceeding.” Chippewa B. Co. v. Durand,
The city having failed to follow the plain mandate of its charter that the contract should be let to the lowest bidder, there was no right to expend city funds for this printing, unless these payments were made to the one who secured the contract for the work by submitting the lowest bid therefor.
The attempt of the city council to ratify the acts of the city officers and to direct them to continue the publication of the proceedings “without the intervention of a formal contract” was so clearly in contravention of the plain mandate of the charter as to be nugatory and to confer"
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
