City of Bartlesville v. Riggs

1925 OK 931, 245 P. 607, 114 Okla. 181, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 1028
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 17, 1925
Docket16165
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1925 OK 931 (City of Bartlesville v. Riggs) 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
City of Bartlesville v. Riggs, 1925 OK 931, 245 P. 607, 114 Okla. 181, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 1028 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

*182 LESTER, J.

This cause arose over a sewer contract between the city officials of the city of Bartlesville and the firm of Reed & Wheelock. Under the terms of said contract, Reed & Wheelock agreed to construct a sanitary sewer system in what is known as sewer district No. 14, city of Bartles-ville, Okla. A number of taxpayers of said' district brought an action in which they sought to have the contract between the city of Bartlesville and Reed & Wheelock be declared null and void. The plaintiff taxpayers sought other relief, which will be hereinafter mentioned.

A trial was had to the court, and the court found all the issues against the plaintiffs, save and except a reduction in the engineer’s fees from 7% to $221.70, being the total of the items the engineer was able to remember having expended in connection with the work, exclusive of the work done by the engineers of the city of Bartlesville, who are on the pay roll of the city. Both parties to this action in the court, below filed exceptions to the findings of the court.

The defendants prosecute this appeal to review the action of the trial court and the plaintiffs file their cross-appeal. For convenience the parties will be referred to as they appeared in the court below. "

The plaintiffs sought to set aside the ordinance assessing their property and the property of others within the sewer district for sewer improvements. The suit by the plaintiffs was commenced within 60 days from the passage and approval of the assessing ordinance sought to he set aside.

The statute in force at the time regulating said assessment was section 471, Rev. Laws 1010, which is as follows:

“No suit shall be sustained to set aside any assessment or certificate issued in pursuance of any assessment or to enjoin the city council or town board from making any improvement, unless brought within 60 days after the passage of the ordinance making such assessment: Provided, that in the event any special assessment shall be set aside or be invalid in whole or in part, the city council or town hoard may. at any time, in the manner herein provided for an original assessment, proceed to cause a new assessment to be made, which shall hav.e the like force and effect as an original assessment.”

The plaintiffs having presented their case on cross-appeal, we will first dispose of their contentions.

The plaintiffs in their brief urge that the statute under which the proceedings were had, the contract let, and the assessment made is unconstitutional, and in answer to this contention this court has passed on this particular question adversely to the plaintiff’s theory in the following cases: City of Perry v. Davis & Younger, 18 Okla. 429, 90 Pac. 865; City of Muskogee v. Rambo, 40 Okla. 672, 138 Pac. 567; Hancock v. City of Muskogee 66 Okla. 195, 108 Pac. 445; City of Bartlesville v. Keeler, 107 Okla. 14, 229 Pac. 450.

The plaintiffs urge that the entire sewer system was advertised for the purpose o£ obtaining bids thereon, and not in the sections or subdivisions. As to this objection, we find no statutory regulation providing that bids must be submitted either • on sectional or subdivision units, and the plaintiffs do not cite any authority in support of their contention on this proposition.

The plaintiffs' also urge that there was not sufficient bids on the proposed work as would justify or warrant the letting of the contract for the entire work. The statute providing for advertising and bidding on said work (Comp. St. 1921, see. 4405) is in part as follows:

“Upon the completion of the plans and specifications and their adoption by the may- or and council or the board of trustees they shall advertise for sealed bids for the performance of such work, for at least ten days if published in a daily newspaper, or at least two weeks if published in a weekly newspaper, which paper shall be of general circulation in the city, and which notice may contain any reasonable conditions to he imposed by the mayor and council or the board of trustees with reference to the letting of such contract, and may require the giving of a good and sufficient bond for the faithful execution of the work, and for the protection of the city and all property owners against any loss or damage by the negligent execution of such work. The notice shall also advise all parties interested that they may appear and protest against said proposed improvement, or any part thereof. At the time and place specified in the notice, the mayor and council or the board of trustees shall, if they find such improvement necessary and proper, award the contract to the lowest and best bidder for the work, which contract shall in no case exceed the aggregate estimate of costs submitted with the plans and specifications, and shall be subject to the right of the mayor and council or the hoard of trustees to reject any and all bids and to readvertise for other, bids when none of the same are, in their judgment, satisfactory:' provided, that where a majority of the property owners in any block petition the may- or and council or the board of trustees for a lateral sewer through or in such block, the advertising for bids shall not be necessary, but the mayor and council or the board *183 of trustees may cause such improvement to be made without such notice.”

The city having accepted the bid of the contractors, Reed & W'heeloek, and the price named in said bid not being above the estimate of the city engineer, we hold that such bid and letting thereon, in the absence of fraud or collusion, was not subject to attack.

It is 'also urged by the plaintiffs that the contractor knew that the estimate was greater than that allowed by law. From a careful examination of the record, we do not find any evidence supporting this contention.

The plaintiffs also urge that the costs of the mains cannot be assessed to the lots in the dis’-rict. but must be home by the dby. Section 464. Revised Laws of 1910, is as follows:

“Except as herein otherwise provided, the construction' and maintenance of public sanitary sewers and storm sewers in cities and towns shall be paid for as follows: Mains and submains, of whatever size or extent, shall be paid for by the city or town; laterals shall be paid for by the owners of the property abutting on such laterals, in the manner provided by law for the estimate of cost and assessments for district sewers: Provided, that where, for the purpose of better drainage, or for other reason, a main or submain shall be constructed in any alley or other place where otherwise a lateral would have been constructed, and where such main or submain serves the purpose of a lateral for the property abutting thereon, the owners of such property shall be assessed in amounts equal to that which they would have been required to pay for a -sufficient lateral; and that where, for any reason, any.

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Related

City of Bartlesville v. Coombs
1925 OK 930 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 931, 245 P. 607, 114 Okla. 181, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 1028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-bartlesville-v-riggs-okla-1925.