Board of Sup'rs v. Payne

166 So. 332, 175 Miss. 12, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 10
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1936
DocketNo. 32064.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 166 So. 332 (Board of Sup'rs v. Payne) 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
Board of Sup'rs v. Payne, 166 So. 332, 175 Miss. 12, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 10 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

*16 McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

W. C. Payne, appellee, filed his bill in the chancery court against the board of supervisors of Lee county, appellant, and J. D. Christian, in which he sought to recover three hundred fifty-nine dollars and forty-three cents on account of an alleged breach of a contract entered into between the board of supervisors and Christian arid himself. The appellant, the board of supervisors, filed a demurrer to the bill, which was overruled; and an appeal to this court was granted by the chancellor to settle all the controlling principles of the case.

The bill alleged that in December, 1931, the board gave notice of its intention to award contracts to the lowest responsible bidders who would furnish bridge lumber for the bridges for the' county for the year of 1932, which notice was duly published; that pursuant to such notice the appellee and J. D. Christian submitted their bid to the board, in which they offered to furnish lumber for the building and repairing of the bridges in the county for the ensuing year at certain prices per thousand for heart pine, red oak, and white oak; that their bid was accepted by the said board, and an order was duly entered on the minutes of said board to that effect, and pursuant thereto the contract was entered into and signed by the president of the board and clerk thereof, and by Payne and Christian; and that on the same day they entered into bond as fixed by the board, which was duly approved by it for the faithful performance of their contract.

*17 It was further alleged that it was the duty of the board to buy from Payne and Christian, during the year 1932, all of the bridge lumber that was necessary to be used in said county at the prices named in the contract, except that under and by virtue of terms of the contract it was provided that the board of supervisors of each district should have the right to purchase from any of the local mills located in said district, lumber, provided it bought the same at the prices set out in the aforesaid contract.

The bill further alleged that appellee and Christian, after the making of said contract, did procure sufficient timber out of which to manufacture and have on hand lumber of the various kinds and descriptions, named in the contract, that might be necessary and needed from time to time during the year of 1932, for the purpose of building and repairing the bridges of the said county, and that they were at all times during the said year, from the 6th day of January, 1932, until the end of said year, able, ready and willing to carry out said contract and furnish the lumber as needed; but notwithstanding the making and entering into of said contract, and notwithstanding the fact'that the said board was under contract to purchase all of the lumber needed for bridge building and repairing for said county for said period of time, except such as might be bought from mills lying and being situated in the district of each supervisor, it totally ignored its duty to so purchase said lumber from the said iPayhe and Christian, and bought a large amount of lumber from other people who had no mill located in the district of the supervisors purchasing the same, and in many cases from persons having no mill located in the county of Lee.

There was then set forth an itemized statement of the amount of lumber purchased by the said board in each of the several districts of the county, for bridge purposes *18 during said year, totaling one hundred seventy-five thousand three hundred eight feet.

It was further charged that appellee’s damages by reason of the breach of the said contract was four dollars per thousand feet, at a low calculation, and that Christian and he, because of the breach of contract by the board of supervisors, suffered a loss of seven hundred eighteen dollars and eighty-seven cents.

It was also alleged that the said board and the said J. D. Christian, through some kind of understanding-unknown to appellee Payne, reached an agreement by which the said Christian agreed to waive and not claim his part of said loss so sustained; and that Christian would not join in the bill with appellee Payne.

The bill further alleged that the claim, as itemized in the exhibit attached to the bill, had been duly presented theretofore to the board of supervisors, and by it r'eiected: and prayed for a decree in appellee’s favor for one-half of the total sum against the board of supervisors.

All the orders, including the notice to bidders, the bid. the contract, and the bond, were allee-ed to have been strictly in accordance with the law, and made exhibits to the bill.

The demurrer to the bill raised the question that there was no equitv on the face of the bill, because there was no statutory liability against the county, and that the suit was unauthorized.

The question for decision on this appeal is thus stated by counsel for the appellee: “Therefore the sole nuestion before the Supreme Court now is: "Whether the Board of Supervisors, the only parties throuah whom a county can make a contract, can proceed strictly according to law in procuring a. contract and entering into the same and then afterwards wilfullv and intentionallv fail to carry-it out and perform the same on their part while the other parties to the contract are bound thereby and at *19 the same time create no liability on the part of the county to the other party to the contract?”

The advertisement for bids, the submission of the bid by Payne and Christian, and the making’ of the contract were had in accordance with section 6064, Code 1930. This section requires all boards of supervisors, board of school trustees of the common school’s, and all boards of mayor and aldermen of municipalities to purchase their supplies for public works and for public buildings and for public constructions, upon competitive bids, letting contracts therefor for periods of not more than twelve months in advance; and forbids the purchase of any supplies to be made by an individual member of the board, with certain exceptions here unimportant. Section 6065, Code 1930, makes it a misdemeanor for any member of the state boards to violate the provisions thereof, and imposes a tine, or imprisonment, or both, upon the offender.

It will be noted that the bill does not allege that any lumber, or anything else of value, was actually furnished to the county. This suit is an effort on the part of the appellee to recover damages from the board of supervisors for a breach of the contract made in pursuance of the section mentioned above, no part of which contract had been performed in any manner by the defendant, or appellant here, in other words, the effort is to recover from the county unliquidated damages for the breach of a contract, no part of which had been performed.

Let it further be noted that there was no contract on the part of the county to purchase from the bidders, Payne and Christian, any specified amount of lumber; and their complaint is that they were damaged by reason of the board’s breaching its contract and purchasing its supply of lumber from strangers.

Section 253, Code 1930, as amended by Laws 1932, c.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 So. 332, 175 Miss. 12, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-suprs-v-payne-miss-1936.