City of Durant v. Story

1925 OK 769, 240 P. 84, 112 Okla. 110, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 554
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 29, 1925
Docket15860
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1925 OK 769 (City of Durant v. Story) 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 Durant v. Story, 1925 OK 769, 240 P. 84, 112 Okla. 110, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 554 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

*111 Opinion by

MAXEY, C.

The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the court below. On the 13th day of February, 1923, the plaintiffs, R. S. Story and G. W. Archibald, a firm doing business as the Democratic Publishing Company, filed their petition in the district court of Bryan county against the city of Durant,- claiming the sum of $2,967.80, with interest from January 6, 1923, for, printing done by the plaintiffs for the city of Durant, as per verified statement. The majority of the items contained in the verified statement consist of publication notices relating to the paving of certain streets in the city of Durant, and some other items for stationery, election tickets, etc.

The defendant filed its answer, consisting of a general denial, and then sets up as a separate defense:

“The defendant further answering denies that it is liable for any of the items set forth in plaintiffs’ itemized accounts; that said items were publications on various street improvement 'rtiisUiets in the city < Durant, and that this defendant is not liable for any of said publications, but that the abutting property on the respective street improvement .districts is by law liable therefor. ”

It appears by the petition of plaintiffs, filed in the district court February 13, 1923, that there were items consisting of primary election tickets and 1,600 election tickets, 500 post cards $5, and printing same $4.75, and resolutions and ordinance notices, the bidders’ notice to contractors, etc., amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $1,445.20. The other items amounted in the aggregate to $1,524 for printing done under paving assessment ordinance, and defendant denies payment of all of them. The ease was tried to the court, a jury having been waived by both parties, and resulted in a judgment for $1,998 85 in favor of plaintiffs. Motion for new trial was filed, overruled, and the case has been duly appealed to this court.

There are four assignments of error, which may all be considered together. The facts in the case seem to have been agreed on at the trial, as will appear from the following statement of counsel:

“The Court: You need not prove that; I know they are correct. The court will admit they are absolutely correct; all of those matters have been published by them. You needn’t make that kind of proof. Mr. Hatchett: All right, I will assume that has been proven. In connection with the preceding questions the plaintiff desires to prove, and expects to prove, that before proceedings were instituted, either by the property owners or by the city council itself, these various sfreetj, to wit, Eim street, E\cr-green street, Eighth avenue, Ninth avenue, Sixth avenue and Bocust street, the resolutions required by law to be published as a preliminary matter to letting the contract and the making of assessments, were protested down in one or two instances' as to certain of these streets, and therefore, under the law, when these preliminary resolutions were passed as required by law, it was the duty of the city council to pass and publish these items. The paving was protested down by the property owners. We further expect to show that as to Elm street, that inasmuch as we have charged here certain appraisements, one item being $236, one item being $308.75, and the notice to contractors, that the pavement on that street got into this situation; the preliminary resolutions were passed by the mayor and city council and published and notice to property owners filed and the city council went ahead and directed the paving proceedings; that notice to contractors be given, and that there are the publication fees for the notice to contractors, and that the contract was let to Mr. Baum, or the Baum Construction Company, and that then appraisers were appointed who made the appraisements and assessed the cost of paving against the abutting property owners, and that these items charged here was for the work, the law having required that the appraisers’ report be published. Mr. Williams: Was that on Elm street? Mr. Hatchett: Yes, sir. We expect further to show that after the appraisers’ reports were published, at the direction of the city authorities, that then certain property owners on said street enjoined in the district court of Bryan county the further progress of the work, and the district court rendered judgment finding that the whole paving proceedings were illegal and invalid and enjoined the whole proceeding. This, in brief, is the position of the plaintiffs. Later on Elm street was paved, but’ not all of it. My position of the law, and I think I can show you that I am absolutely correct, is that if the paving district goes through, all the costs of proceedings is charged against the abutting property owners, and is not a liability of the city. But where the city authorities go. ahead and institute the preliminary proceedings leading up to the assessments, and before the assessment becomes fixed and a valid lien on this property, some irregularity develops and the proceedings are enjoined, or if the property owners protest it down, then there is no way to fix the charge against the property owners under the law, and it then becomes, under the lalvv, as far as the cost of printing, advertising, etc., is concerned, a personal liability of the city. The Court: How does it become a personal liability of the city, if there was no estimate made to take care of such things? Mr. Williams: That is the point we are making, that we are not liable. Mr. *112 Hatchett: It is a part of the governmental function of the city. The law made it the duty of the city to authorize the publication of these advertisements, and there is no other way provided to take care of it except in this way. The Court: I think that is immaterial Mr. Hatchett: Does ¿he court hold that we can’t go ahead and prove these facts ? The Court: The court will hold that those are the facts; the court will admit that what you said are the facts. Mr. Hatchett: Then it will be admitted that the statement of facts as made by the attorney for the plaintiffs are the facts and is the evidence in this case. Mr. Williams: Yes, we agree. The Court: That is with reference to the Elm street paving. What are you going to do about the other items? Mr. Hatchett: Well, there is Evergreen and Eighth, they are all in the same situation. As to Evergreen street, the facts are these: That they started proceedings, the property owners did, to pave Evergreen and Eighth streets, also Sixteenth, and also Sixth and also Ninth, and also Eighth, and they published the preliminary resolutions. The Court: And gave notice to the property owners, and they protested it down? Mr. Hatchett: Yes, sir; the property owners. The property owners signed the petition, and after they got it up and got it ready, they decided it was too much. The Court: After the property owners moved the city council to do that? Mr. Hatchett: Yes, sir. The Court: Then they protested it down? Mir. Hatchett: Yes, sir. Witness: They came before the city council and asked them not to do it. The Court: Well, that is a protest. Mr. Hatchett: Then after the preliminary resolutions were passed, as required by law, the property owners protested down the pavement on those streets. These are the facts with reference to the paving items. As to these other items, ordinances, primary tickets, etc., it is admitted that they furnished the material and did the work. Mr. Williams: We agree to the facts as stated by counsel for plaintiff.”

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Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 769, 240 P. 84, 112 Okla. 110, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-durant-v-story-okla-1925.