City of Detroit v. Grummond

216 F. 273, 132 C.C.A. 417, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1340
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 25, 1914
DocketNo. 2478
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 216 F. 273 (City of Detroit v. Grummond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Detroit v. Grummond, 216 F. 273, 132 C.C.A. 417, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1340 (6th Cir. 1914).

Opinion

COCHRAN, District Judge.

This case is here, after the lapse of ten jrears, for the second time. At the former hearing a judgment in favor of defendant in error, plaintiff below, against the plaintiff in error, defendant below, for the sum of $16,366.66, entered upon a verdict of á jury, was reversed, with direction to award a new trial. The opinion was by Judge Severens, and is reported in .121 Fed. 963, 58 C. C. A. 301. It is assumed that the reader hereof has read that opinion and the recital of facts which precedes it. The new trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff for the sum of $7,500, and it is from the judgment thereon that this writ was .taken.

The first judgment was reversed on three grounds, to wit: The exclusion from evidence of the entry of September 8, 1892, in the record of the board of health; the direction to the jury to find for the plaintiff, which was based on the ground that the execution of the contract in suit, of date November 30, 1892, had been ratified by the city; and the charge as to the measure of damages. The admissibility of the entry was put upon the ground that it could reasonably be claimed that it evidenced another contract of letting of the boat than that one, to wit, a contract with Capt. Grummond, of the date of the entry, to which plaintiff succeeded as lessor upon the sale thereof to him, September 14th, which contract was void because of Capt. Grummond’s member-' ship in the board of health, undér which, rather than it, the possession of the boat may have been taken and kept and the hire paid, in which case such action on the part of the' city would not have been a ratification of the contract in suit. It was held that the uncertainty as to which contract that action was referable made the question of ratification thereof one for the jury and not for the court. It was assumed that the contract was executed without authority of the board of health, upon whom and the health officer power to act in the matter had been conferred by the resolution of the common council of September 2d, and that therefore the liability of the city thereon depended on whether it had ratified its execution on its behalf.

' No such errors were committed on the new trial. The entry was admitted in evidence, the question of ratification was submitted to the jury, and the measure of damages given accorded with the ruling of thi/3 court. The assignments of error now relied on mainly complain of certain rulings, each of which negated the position taken by the defendant at and maintained by it all through the trial that, as a matter df'láw, plaintiff was not entitled to recover. They were the overruling of its objection to the admission in evidence of the contract in suit, the overruling of its motion at the close of all the evidence to direct a ver-[275]*275diet for it, and the refusal to give to the jury certain requests, in each of which they were charged that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, to each of which rulings defendant duly excepted. The objection, motion, and special requests were each expressly based on the position that, as a matter of law, the execution of the contract was without authority; the several special requests differing only in the way in which the want of authority was put. The court submitted to the jury the questions of authority and ratification both, and charged them that the plaintiff was entitled to recover, if the execution of the contract had been either authorized or ratified by the city.

[1] It was not sufficient to sustain defendant in this position that the contract had been executed without authority. It was necessary also that its execution had not been ratified. Though unauthorized, it was binding if ratified. Such was the presupposition and concession of the decision on the former hearing, and see Hill v. Indianapolis (C. C.) 92 Fed. 467. And possibly it was not open to the lower court and is not now open to this court to hold that, as a matter of law, the contract had not been ratified. The ground of this is that on the former hearing it was held that the lower court had erred in holding that, as a matter of law, the contract had been ratified, and that the question of ratification was for the jury. But, apart from the question of the conclusiveness of the former decision that the question was for the jury, we see no reason for receding therefrom.

[2] The facts on the new trial differed in two particulars from those on the first and in other particulars were more definite. The more important of the two particulars in which they differed was as to the date of payment of the hire of the boat. Judge Severens had it that it was paid November 22d; i. e., eight days before the execution of the contract. It was in fact not paid until December 7th; i. e., seven days after its execution. The bill therefor was presented to the common council by the controller November 22d, and it was then referred to the committee on claims and accounts. It does not appear when it was allowed, but it was not paid until December 7th. The other particular of difference is this: Judge Severens had it that in the report of September 13th to the common council by the health officer it was stated that, “at another meeting held in the mayor’s office, Controller Black stated that a boat could be procured for $5,000 for two years; the board to pay insurance on $12,-000.” In the record before us no reference is made in the report to the matter of insurance. The particulars in which the case was more definite are these. The report of the committee on ways-and means of the common council on the report of the health board of September 13th was made to that body and adopted by it September 20th. The possession of the boat was given to the city not “as early as September 14th”— probably not until after September 20th. The city, when it took possession, equipped it with disinfecting apparatus, new linen, and mattresses, and added some staterooms to her. The contract was executed in the city clerk’s office, and the corporation counsel was consulted and advised as to how the contract was to be signed on behalf of the city, and wrote the words “City of Detroit by,” “President of Board of Health,” and “Health Officers” in the signature. Simultaneously with [276]*276the execution of the bill of sale of the boat by Capt. Grummond to the plaintiff (i. e., on September 14th), the former transferred certain insurance policies on the boat by indorsement on the policies, and these policies were delivered to the controller in October, before the 10th. The official who thus received notice of the transfer took a most active part in the transaction. He presented Capt. Grummond’s proposition to the board of health; together with the health officer he was appointed by the board to look after the expenditures, the matter of which appointment was referred to in the report to the common council September 13th; he presented to the common council plaintiff’s bill for the hire of the boat, and on December 7th paid it to plaintiff. On the assumption that the contract in suit was executed without authority, .these particulars, in which the case at the new trial differed from and was more definite than that at the first trial, favored the position that the contract had been ratified.

But it cannot be said, as a matter of law, that the contract in suit was executed without authority. At the least that was a question for the jury, and the lower court was right in submitting it to them.

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Bluebook (online)
216 F. 273, 132 C.C.A. 417, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-detroit-v-grummond-ca6-1914.