City of Detroit v. Robinson

38 Mich. 108, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 19
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 38 Mich. 108 (City of Detroit v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court 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. Robinson, 38 Mich. 108, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 19 (Mich. 1878).

Opinion

Marston, J.

Robinson and Farwell brought an action of assumpsit against the city of Detroit to recover a balance which they claimed was due and owing them on account of materials furnished and work and labor done in paving a portion of Woodward avenue in said city.

It appeared from the testimony of Farwell, one of the plaintiffs, and was not disputed, that the materials were furnished and work and labor performed under a contract made between the city and Eobinson in 1875 and afterwards assigned to a -copartnership composed of plaintiffs. It farther appeared that the entire work and labor done and materials furnished under the contract amounted to the sum of $5,931.28; that all of this had been paid except the sum of $833.69, which had been withheld and was then in the city treasury.

On the part of the defendant it was claimed that the plaintiffs, claiming- to be licensees of Phillips and Stowe patent pavements, had sold the city the right to use the same during the year 1875 at sixteen cents per square yard for so much of the same or either as might be laid; that in accordance with the terms of the contract under which this work was done, the city was authorized to, and did retain sixteen cents per square yard to pay all royalty due on account of laying the pavement under the contract. The defendant farther claimed that the patent under which this pavement was laid was void for want of novelty; that the plaintiffs had previously sued the city to recover a large amount claimed to be due them for royalty, and that the amount claimed in .this case was also included in that, and that the claim in Ibis case had been presented to the council as a claim for royalty. The defendant farther claimed and offered to show that Stowe, the patentee, had served a notice upon the city, not to pay royalty to the plaintiffs, but to himself.

In rebuttal the plaintiffs offered in evidence the Phillips patent, a license to them from Phillips to lay this pavement and an abstract of title to the same which [110]*110was admitted, and plaintiff Farwell then testified that the pavement laid, upon which this balance was claimed to be due, was laid under the Phillips patent, and this balance the plaintiffs claimed not as a royalty, but as due under their paving contract.

Counsel for defendant requested the court to charge the jury, in substance, that June 29th, 1875, plaintiffs and defendant made a written contract for paving a certain part of Woodward avenue; that the work was done, accepted by the board of public works, and the amount due ordered paid by the council; that the contract amount was assessed, collected and paid over except $833; that this amount was retained under the contract; that the question to be determined is whether plaintiffs are entitled to recover this sum, which depends upon the construction to be placed upon the contract by the court; that by the contract plaintiffs agreed, first, to pay all royalty on the pavement called for by the contract and specifications attached to it, describing the “Stowe cedar block and sand foundation pavement;” second, to protect the city against all claims for any patent used in the construction of said pavement, viz.: the pavement specified in the specifications; third, that in order to insure the protection of the city, it had a right to retain this money, until some one should establish a title to it as royalty; that in order to properly construe this clause in the contract, the written bid of plaintiffs and the printed advertisement of the city referred to therein, must be construed in connection therewith; that the advertisement cannot be clearly understood without reference, 1st, to the invitation of the city addressed to plaintiffs in March, suggesting that they file a proposition for use of the patent: 2d, to their proposition afterwards put in on April 5th, transmitting only the Stowe patent: 3d, to the acceptance of that proposition by the board of public works April 23d: 4th, to the advertisement of June 17th requiring bidders: and 5th, the bid itself; that all these writings being in pari ma-[111]*111term are to be construed together; that under them the' pavement contracted for was the Stowe pavement, and that the ninety-four cents expressed in the contract included the sixteen cents royalty on the Stowe patent, and that it was not competent under this contract to show that the pavement was laid under the Phillips patent; that in order for plaintiffs to recover they must make out a title to the sum retained as owners of a royalty, and not as contractors, and that the pavement laid was covered by the Stowe patent, and that they had introduced no evidence to show that the pavement was covered by the Stowe patent. The court refused each and all of these requests, and charged that it made no difference whether the patent existed or not upon the pavement in this case, whether or not the Phillips or the Stowe or any other of them were actually laid.

This statement is somewhat lengthy, but it presents pretty clearly the questions which counsel desired to have the court pass upon. In the light of what has been already stated, we will now, and before attempting to pass upon any of the legal questions raised, give as brief and condensed an abstract of the contract and writings already referred to as can consistently be done, in their regular chronological order.

On the 5th day of March, 1875, a communication was sent by the board of public works to Eugene Eobinson, notifying him that no bids for patent wood pavement would be received unless thrown open to competition, and that in order to prevent any misunderstanding thereafter, he was requested to file with the board a copy of any patent he was interested in or controlled; also to file a proposition showing what royalty contractors would have to pay.

April 5th, 1875, Eobinson and Earwell sent a communication to the board of public works offering the use of the Phillips round block pavement and the Stowe cedar pavement for the season of 1875 for the sum of sixteen [112]*112cents per square yard, and enclosed- therewith the Stowe patent and their authority to lay the same.

The board of public works accepted so much of this communication as refers to the use of the Stowe patent.

June 17th the board advertised for sealed proposals “ for furnishing all the labor and materials and regrading and repaving Woodward avenue * with wood pavement according to the specifications adopted by the common council and the estimates of the city engineer.” The advertisement, among other provisions, contained a clause that “bidders for patent wood pavement must include in their proposals the amount of royalty which the city has contracted to pay the owners of the patent.”

In reply to this Eugene Bobinson addressed a communication to the board offering to execute and perform the work specified in the advertisement and the specifications adopted by the common council at prices therein stated: “For furnishing and laying square yards of Stowe wood paving, including ballast and top dressing, 95 cents per square yard; Phillips cedar block, 98 cents; Wyeoff cedar block, 90 cents.” The same proposition seems to have been repeated for paving generally in the city, the only difference being 94 instead of 95 cents for Stowe pavement.

The specifications referred to in this advertisement and offer were headed “specifications for Stowe cedar foundation pavement,” and the specifications in fact describe the Stowe pavement, and are inconsistent with the Phillips patent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Mich. 108, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-detroit-v-robinson-mich-1878.