Brooks v. City of Gilroy

29 P.2d 212, 219 Cal. 766, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 631
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1934
DocketDocket No. S.F. 14933.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 29 P.2d 212 (Brooks v. City of Gilroy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. City of Gilroy, 29 P.2d 212, 219 Cal. 766, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 631 (Cal. 1934).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

This action was instituted by the plaintiff against the City of Gilroy upon a claim assigned to him by Charles E. Sloan to recover for services as an engineer, alleged to have been performed by Sloan for said city in connection with certain street improvements which the City of Gilroy planned to construct in said city. There is no *768 conflict in the evidence as to the rendition of the services by ■Sloan or as to their reasonable value. Upon these issues the court found in favor of the plaintiff, and rendered judgment in his favor for the sum of $11,621.12. From this judgment, the defendant city has appealed.

It is first contended by the City of Gilroy that the contract whereby it employed Sloan to act as engineer in connection with said street improvement work was invalid and without any legal binding effect for the reason that said city at the date it entered into said contract of employment had a legally appointed and acting city engineer. It is admitted that Sloan’s employment was made under the provisions of .section 41 of the Improvement Act of 1911, under which the said city was acting in making said street improvements. This section provides in part as follows: “In all those cities where there is no city engineer, the city council thereof is hereby authorized and empowered to appoint a suitable person to discharge the duties herein laid down as those of city engineer, and all the provisions hereof applicable to the city engineer shall apply to such person so appointed. Said city council is hereby empowered to fix his compensation for such services.” (Stats. 1911, p. 751.)

The defense that the contract was illegal for the reason that the City of Gilroy had a city engineer at the time it entered into said contract with Sloan was not made in the pleadings, nor did the court make any finding regarding that issue. It does not appear that at the trial of this action this defense was particularly stressed nor was it openly relied upon by the City of Gilroy. This may have been the reason why the court failed to find whether said city had a legally appointed and qualified city engineer at the time it entered into its contract with Sloan. There is some evidence, which was probably incompetent, and which no doubt would have been denied admission had objection been made to its introduction, that on January 9, 1924, when the city council of the City of Gilroy first took official action regarding Sloan’s appointment, the City of Gilroy had an acting city engineer by the name of H. B. Fisher, who some time in the year 1912 had been appointed city engineer of said city, or at least had been employed by said city to perform certain engineering work for said city. We will assume, however, simply for the purpose of this discussion, but not *769 in any way determining that such was the fact, that H. B. Fisher was on the ninth day of January, 1924, city engineer of the City of Gilroy. To properly determine, however, whether Sloan’s appointment was illegal by reason of the assumed fact that the City of Gilroy had a city engineer at the time it entered into its employment of Sloan, it is necessary to make a more detailed statement of facts than we have made above. It appears from the record before us that under date of January 9, 1924, Sloan wrote and delivered a letter to the mayor and common council of the City of Gilroy asking to be appointed city engineer in connection with its contemplated street improvement and paving work. In this letter, he stated that he would do the required engineering work for said improvement, including supervision of construction, for a compensation of eight per cent of the contract price of said improvement. On the same day the council met and passed a resolution “that we hire Charles B. Sloan as per his agreement on the table’’, evidently referring to Sloan’s letter. On February 11, 1924, the city council again met and at this meeting declared the office of city engineer vacant, and appointed Charles B. Sloan to said office. On March 3, 1924, Sloan was authorized to prepare plans and specifications for said work and improvements, and on March 17, 1924, the city council adopted the plans and specifications for the paving of said streets prepared by Sloan and fixed his compensation at eight per cent of the contract price of said work and improvement. Thereafter, the council passed a resolution of intention to do said work, and subsequently took all the necessary proceedings required by the statute for the construction of said work and improvement, including the awarding of the contract to the Southwest Paving Company for the sum of $464,845. No contract, however, was entered into with said company for said work and improvement, and on September 11, 1924, the city council by resolution abandoned said proceedings, and the bond given by said paving company at the time of the filing of its bid was ordered returned to said company. On May 4, 1926, Sloan presented a claim to the city council for his services rendered in said proceeding in the- amount of $30,263.37, which claim was rejected by the council on the day of its presentation. Sloan thereafter assigned his claim to the plaintiff, and on August 12, 1926, plaintiff commenced *770 this action on said claim. Upon a trial of the case before the court, as stated above, judgment was rendered for plaintiff in the sum of $11,621.12, for the reasonable value of said services.

From the foregoing statement of facts, it is quite evident if the city council was without authority on January 9, 1924, to appoint Sloan to act as city engineer in the construction of said work and improvement by reason of the fact that said city had at that date a duly appointed and qualified city engineer, that on February 11, 1924, after it had declared the office of city engineer vacant, such lack of power to so employ Sloan no longer existed. The record shows that after the city, on February 11, 1924, had declared the office of city engineer vacant, it then proceeded to appoint Sloan to such position. After this appointment of Sloan, he was directed to prepare the plans and specifications for the contemplated street work and his compensation was fixed, and it was under this employment that he performed the services for which his assignee was awarded judgment. It, therefore, appears to us to be entirely immaterial, as far as the legality of Sloan’s employment is involved, whether the City of Gilroy had a city engineer on January 9, 1924, or at any other time prior to February 11, 1924, when Sloan was employed. It is true the trial court found that Sloan was appointed city engineer on January 9, 1924, and based its judgment in plaintiff’s favor on that finding. But in view of the undisputed evidence before us, we do not think the„ actual date of Sloan’s appointment is controlling if the evidence shows, as it does without any contradiction, that, if he was not legally employed on the prior date, he was on the subsequent date, after which he rendered the services here involved.

It is next contended by appellant that the percentage contract between Sloan and the City of Gilroy was illegal for the reason that Sloan was on March 17, 1924, when the resolution was passed by the City of Gilroy fixing Sloan’s compensation at eight per cent of the total cost of said improvement, an officer of said city, to wit, its city engineer, and was, therefore, prohibited by law from being interested in any contract made with the city. Appellant relies upon Kennedy v. City of Gustine,

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Bluebook (online)
29 P.2d 212, 219 Cal. 766, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-city-of-gilroy-cal-1934.