American-LaFrance, Inc. v. City of Philadelphia

184 So. 620, 183 Miss. 207, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 234
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1938
DocketNo. 33280.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 184 So. 620 (American-LaFrance, Inc. v. City of Philadelphia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American-LaFrance, Inc. v. City of Philadelphia, 184 So. 620, 183 Miss. 207, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 234 (Mich. 1938).

Opinions

Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On August 27, 1929, appellant made a written proposal to appellee’s mayor and board of aldermen to furnish to appellee an American-LaFrance Six Cylinder Buick Fire Truck with its accessories and equipment at the sum of $5,500' F. O B. Philadelphia, Mississippi, payments to be made $825 cash oh delivery, and the remainder in five annual equal payments with six per cent interest per annum from date. Along with this proposal, and as a part' thereof, there were elaborate specifications in detail of the machinery and equipment to be furnished, these specifications covering some twenty pages of the present transcript.

This proposal and the said specifications having been formally filed with the municipal board, the board, at its regular meeting on September 3, 1929, made and entered the following order:

“The matter of buying a fire truck and a. Road Machine came on to be heard by the Board, and after careful consideration of the needs for better equipment for the purpose of abating and extinguishing fires and also the need of a better machine for the building and maintenance of the streets of the city, the Board by a unanimous vote ordered the clerk to advertise for bids on one American-LaFrance Six Cylinder Buick Fire Truck with pump attachments; and also one Austin Western Road Machine.”

At the next meeting of the board on October 2, 1929, the following order was entered:

“The matter of receiving and opening all bids on fire trucks advertised for by the City came on to be heard and considered, and after a careful consideration of bids, on motion of B. M. White, seconded by E. S. Cole, it was *218 ordered that the City purchase one American-LaFrance Six Cylinder Buick Fire Truck with pump attachments. ’ ’

These are the only orders respecting the making of the contract which appear on the minutes of the mayor and board of aldermen, and were not sufficient to effectuate a valid sale, requisite elements having been omitted from the recitals of the minutes, as pointed out in Kidder v. McClanahan, 126 Miss. 179, 88 So. 508. Nevertheless the mayor in the name of the city signed the contract; the engine and equipment were delivered on or about November 1, 1929,, were examined and were found in every respect to be according to* the specifications; the cash payment was made, and the notes for the deferred payments were signed and delivered for the city by the mayor; and the city entered upon the use of the machinery and equipment, and has ever since continued so to use it.

The first two notes, principal and interest, were paid, and the interest on the third note. But the principal on that note and the principal and interest on the fourth and fifth notes have been, since their due dates, at all times in default. Repeated efforts by appellant to make collection in whole or .in part were made, but without success, although throughout all the time thereof the city made no claim that there was any imperfection or illegality in the contract or that the machinery failed in any way to comply with the specifications aforesaid.

Finally on October 27, 1986, appellant filed its bill to foreclose its purchase money lien and later its amended bill, praying in the alternative that it have a decree for the repossession of the machinery and for a reasonable compensation for its use. To this bill the city interposed demurrers which were sustained and the suit was dismissed.

Inasmuch as no valid leg’al contract was ever consummated, the city is not indebted to appellant for a purchase money demand either for the amount stated in the proposed contract or upon a quantum valebant, and thus the *219 remaining issues are those presented in the alternative. The real questions before the court are, therefore, these: When the alleged sale of machinery to the city is void for want of formal compliance with legal requirements, but the city retains and uses the property, may the alleged seller recover (1) the property, and (2) a reasonable compensation for its use?

Before proceeding further upon that specific inquiry, we must eliminate from the field of discussion the three following situations: First, because these are not before us under the present facts, and, second, because they are no longer to be considered as fairly debatable. These are: (a) Where there has been in the transaction actual moral corruption, both on the part of the seller and of the officers or agents of the municipality, or actual corruption on the part of one side with the knowledge and acquiescence of the other. In such a case the court, as a general rule, will extend no aid but will leave the situation as it is found, (b) Where the municipality is not authorized in any manner or at any time to make the pretended purchase, where the transaction is not within an object authorized by law under any circumstances, in which case the seller, in the absence of actual corruption, may repossess the property but nothing for its use. And (c) where the municipality is not authorized in any manner or at any time to lease the property in issue, in which case, in the absence of actual corruption, the lessee may repossess the property but nothing for its use. And in the three situations dealt with in this paragraph it is immaterial that the purported contract may have been executed with all the formalities and in the observance of every detail which would be required in a lawful contract. See, for instance, Edwards House Co. v. City of Jackson, 138 Miss. 644, 103 So. 428, 42 A. L, R. 625.

Coming then to the question before us, thus more precisely disclosed, to-wit, Where there is no actual corruption, and the transaction is within the objects au *220 thorized hy law, but the contract is void for want of compliance with legal requirements in the making thereof, may the alleged seller recover (1) the property and (2) a reasonable compensation for its use? As to the recovery of the property in such a case, there seems to be no division among the authorities. The sales contract being invalid, the title has never passed from the seller, and he is permitted to recover that to which he has the title, so long as within the reach of the processes of replevin, or other appropriate action or suit.

It is upon the second feature of the stated question that the courts have widely differed and have ranged themselves and the rule to which they adhere into three groups, which may be approximately defined as follows:

I. Those that broadly hold to the doctrine of implied liability on the part of the municipality to do justice and to make a fair compensation for the use of property which it has received and used, under the same rules applicable as between private persons, whatever may be the extent of the invalidity of the contract, or even when there has been no contract of any kind at all. They say that the obligation to do justice rests alike upon all persons whether natural or artificial, and that it would no more be permissible that a municipality may accept or take the property of another and use it for a legitimate municipal purpose and benefit, and then contend it owed nothing for that use because of the absence of a valid, express contract, than it would be for a private person or private corporation to do the like.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
184 So. 620, 183 Miss. 207, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-lafrance-inc-v-city-of-philadelphia-miss-1938.