Ajax Contractors, Inc. v. Myatt

1967 OK 19, 424 P.2d 30
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 24, 1967
Docket41699
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 1967 OK 19 (Ajax Contractors, Inc. v. Myatt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ajax Contractors, Inc. v. Myatt, 1967 OK 19, 424 P.2d 30 (Okla. 1967).

Opinion

DAVISON, Justice.

This is an appeal by Ajax Contractors, Inc., herein referred to as “Ajax,” from a judgment in favor of H. L. Myatt, plaintiff below, adjudging certain proceedings of the City Council of the City of Altus to be void and vacating such proceedings.

The judgment was rendered in an action filed by Myatt, as a resident and taxpayer, against Mayor, Hoyt Shadid, and the eight members of the City Council including one Leonard Merritt. Ajax intervened in the action.

The matter is submitted to this court upon the record made in the lower court and by briefs and oral argument in this court. There appears to be no dispute as to the facts upon which the lower court based its judgment. The City Council had advertised for bids for construction of a twenty inch water transmission line as a part of the Round Timber Water Project with alternate specifications for at least two types of *32 pipe. The bids were opened at a meeting of the City Council on June 21, 1965, with the Mayor and all Councilmen present. Ajax submitted a bid of $827,507.55 on a certain type of pipe and one Three R Construction Co., had bid $710,325.72 on another type of pipe. On a motion to accept the bid of Ajax the City Council voted four for and four against the motion with Leonard Merritt voting in favor of the motion. The Mayor then broke the tie vote and voted in favor of the motion to accept the bid of Ajax.

Plaintiff filed the present action on June 24, 1965, to restrain and enjoin the defendants Mayor and Councilmen from executing any contract or doing any further act to finalize and complete an agreement between the City of Altus and Ajax with reference to the water transmission line. The issues made up by the petition, the response of the defendants, and the petition in intervention of Ajax, were: (1) whether the defendants Mayor and Council acted on proper and justifiable grounds in accepting and approving the higher bid of Ajax and in effect rejecting the lower bid of Three R Construction Co., and (2) whether on and at the meeting of the Council held June 21, 1965, the defendant Leonard Merritt was qualified and entitled to vote as a member of the City Council. Plaintiff alleged that the office of Councilman for the city ward in which Merritt had been elected had become vacant because Merritt had moved from the ward prior to such meeting and Merritt’s vote was a nullity, and consequently the true and legal vote of the Council on the motion to accept the bid of Ajax was four to three against such acceptance. Ajax denied the Council seat held by Merritt had become vacant and alleged that in any event Merritt was acting as a de facto Councilman, and further that Ajax had a valid and binding contract with the City of Altus.

Trial of the matter was held July 6, 1965. It was stipulated that Merritt had moved from the ward in which he had been elected a member of the City Council and that such removal was prior to the vote on the bids at the meeting of June 21, 1965. The trial judge limited the hearing to the single issue of whether Merritt was a member of the Council and qualified to vote at the meeting of June 21, 1965, stating:

“ * * * but the issue, as the Court sees it, is whether or not at the council meeting on whatever date is stated, Leonard Merritt was a member of the council and whether or not he was qualified to vote. That matter I would like to take up first. I don’t believe it is the duty or province of the Court to go into whether this was or wasn’t the best material. The only question I propose to hear at this time is the question of legality. ‡ *
“regardless of what is contained in the pleadings, this Court has stated, just as Mr. Harbison has stated, that I am limiting the issues this morning to the legal question of whether or not Mr. Merritt was entitled to vote and whether the vote was legal according to law. * * * ”

In accordance with the court’s ruling the hearing was limited to this issue. Based upon the stipulation and the court’s interpretation of the law, the court held and adjudged that the removal of Merritt from his ward created a vacancy in such Council office and Merrit was not entitled to vote and no contract was in existence or executed by reason thereof, and that the subject Council proceedings were void and were set aside and vacated, and that the entire proceeding be remanded to the City Council for such further action as, in their discretion, may be taken in connection therewith.

Ajax contends that under the admitted circumstances Merritt continued to occupy the office of Councilman as a de facto officer.

Title 11 O.S.1961, § 571, sets forth the requisite qualifications for city councilmen and provides that the removal of any councilman “from the ward, for which he shall be elected, shall cause a vacancy in said office. Vacancies in office, provided for *33 herein, shall he filled by appointment, by the council.”

The general statute, Officers, SI O.S. 1961, § 8, provides in part as follows:

“Every office shall become vacant on the happening of either of the following events before the expiration of the term of such office:
“Fourth. Ceasing to be a resident of the * * * city or town, or of any district thereof, in which the duties of his office are to be exercised or for which he may have been elected or appointed.

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1967 OK 19, 424 P.2d 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ajax-contractors-inc-v-myatt-okla-1967.