Builders Supply Co. v. City of Helena

154 P.2d 270, 116 Mont. 368, 1944 Mont. LEXIS 52
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1944
DocketNo. 8460.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 154 P.2d 270 (Builders Supply Co. v. City of Helena) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Builders Supply Co. v. City of Helena, 154 P.2d 270, 116 Mont. 368, 1944 Mont. LEXIS 52 (Mo. 1944).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JOHNSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendant City of Helena appeals from a judgment for $5,-044.10 in plaintiff’s favor upon the latter’s suit for a balance of $6,271 claimed to be due and unpaid upon its purchase of water pipe and couplings but which the present mayor and *371 commissioners refuse to pay. There are 63 specifications of error, many of which relate to evidence admitted or rejected and instructions given or refused; but it will be necessary to consider only the specification that the court erred in entering judgment for plaintiff and against defendant.

The amended complaint alleged that between March 6, 1939, and January 15, 1940, plaintiff sold defendant 7,239 lineal feet of water pipe and 75 extra couplings at stated prices; that defendant paid in full for 3,366.5 feet of said pipe and 50 extra couplings, but refused to pay for 3,872.5 feet of pipe and 25 couplings of the reasonable value of $6,271; that defendant installed all of the pipe in the ground as part of its water system; that it is contrary to conscience and fair dealing for defendant to retain the same and refuse to pay for it; that on July 25, 1940, plaintiff demanded that defendant either return the said 3,872.5 linear feet of pipe and 25 couplings, or pay their reasonable value, $6,271; that the defendant refused to do either “although it had * * * the ability” so to do.

Except for the admission of certain formal matters and of its refusal to pay plaintiff the $6,271 demanded, defendant in its answer denied the allegations of the complaint and set up affirmative defenses to the effect that the transaction was fraudulent and in violation of the budget and bid laws; that the transaction exceeded $500 in amount, but that it was made to appear as a number of transactions for less than that amount in order to circumvent and evade the bid law, section 5070, Revised Codes, which provided that: “All contracts for work, or for supplies or material, for which must be paid a sum exceeding five hundred dollars * * * must be let to the lowest responsible bidder, under such regulations as the council may prescribe; * *

Upon plaintiff’s motion all references to the violations of budget and bid laws were stricken; other affirmative allegations were denied by reply.

Also upon plaintiff’s objections, all reference to budget and bid laws were stricken from defendant’s requested instructions *372 and special interrogatories, the only questions submitted to the jury being six special interrogatories as to the value of the pipe, the sum of money which plaintiff was entitled to recover from defendant, and whether any fraud was practiced in the transactions. The jury found that the value was as claimed by plaintiff, except as to full lengths of pipe, which it reduced ten cents per foot. It found that' there was no fraud and that plaintiff was entitled to recover $5,044.10 from defendant, without reference to interest.

Deeming this an equity case as contended by plaintiff, although defendant at all times argued that it was a law case, the court submitted only the above special interrogatories to the jury, and pursuant to the jury’s findings, entered its own findings of fact that all the pipe in question was placed in and constitutes part of the defendant’s water system, that 3,872.5 feet of pipe and 25 extra couplings and rings had not been paid for, that plaintiff had demanded the return thereof or the payment of $6,271 therefor, that the city had refused to comply with either demand, that the reasonable values and the total unpaid amount were as found by the jury, that the pipe was sold by plaintiff in good faith and without fraud, and that it was ‘‘ contrary to conscience and fair dealing for the defendant to retain the said transit pipe, coupling and rings and refuse to pay for the same. ’ ’ Its conclusion of law was that plaintiff was entitled to judgment for $5,044.10 with interest from July 25, 1940, the date of demand for payment. Judgment was rendered accordingly.

The record shows that in 1937 the mayor and the city engineer decided that it was advisable to replace some 12,000 to 18,000 feet of the water pipe line to the Hale Beservoir. Without any official action by the city council and without obtaining bids from others, the mayor arranged with plaintiff to supply cement asbestos pipe for the entire project. The prices agreed upon between plaintiff and the mayor were those alleged in the complaint. Plaintiff’s president testified that he named those prices because a price of $1.40 per foot was quoted *373 to him by Mr. Richardson, the manufacturer’s Montana representative at Great Falls, for pipe in less than carload lots. Later, upon being informed that the prices were too high, the mayor made complaint to the plaintiff’s president and was told that the price of the next carload would be reduced; but no reduction was ever made. It was understood between the mayor and the plaintiff that many thousand feet of pipe would be needed, and that it was to be available for the city’s use. as required, but that each claim presented should be for less than $500. The first car of pipe was shipped to plaintiff by the manufacturer on September 13, 1937, the second on November 17, 1937, the third on December 7, 1938, and the fourth on May 10, 1939.

The laying of the pipe was finally done as a WPA project, beginning in November, 1938, when the first pipe was taken by the city from plaintiff’s yard. But plaintiff had already been paid $7,462.40 upon its claims covering the first two carloads of pipe, each payment being upon a claim for exactly $480 except the last claim prior to the commencement of work, which was for $262.40 and which completed payment for the second ear. All pipe was called for and removed from plaintiff’s yard by a city truck at various times and in varying amounts, but the same system of claims and payments continued throughout.

The total transaction involved 12,803 feet of pipe, the cost of which at the agreed prices was to be $20,920.40, and upon which the city made payments totalling $14,649.40, leaving the balance of $6,271 claimed by plaintiff.

Throughout the trial and at all times up to the filing of its petition for rehearing plaintiff strenuously contended that the transaction constituted separate purchases for less than $500 each and that section 5070 did not apply.

In plaintiff’s evidence several inconsistent explanations were given for this peculiar way of handling the transaction as a series of separate purchases for less than $500 each. The former mayor, by whom the transaction was conducted, testified on behalf of the plaintiff. When asked if he was not aware that *374 bids were required for purchases in excess of $500, he replied that the law was not applicable because “we were buying in amounts less than $500.00.”

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Bluebook (online)
154 P.2d 270, 116 Mont. 368, 1944 Mont. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/builders-supply-co-v-city-of-helena-mont-1944.