City of Lancaster v. Miller

58 Ohio St. (N.S.) 558
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 58 Ohio St. (N.S.) 558 (City of Lancaster v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio 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 Lancaster v. Miller, 58 Ohio St. (N.S.) 558 (Ohio 1898).

Opinion

Bradbury, J.

This action was begun by the filing of the following petition:

“In the month of---, A. D. 1891, the defendant, which is a municipal corporation, was engaged in improving Broad and Columbus streets in said city of Laneester, with a brick pavement and at the same' time the plaintiff was engaged in performing his contract duly made with the defendant to put a twenty-four inch sewer across said Columbus and Broad streets at their intersection with Mill street in said city and connect them with and build eight sewer pipe catch-basins with McDonald tops at the four corners of said streets at their intersections and one such catch-basin at an alley on Columbus street, near to said Mill street, and the performance of which contract required the use of the following materials, and for the same and the necessary labor to dig the trenches, etc., and put said material in place and fill said trenches, he was entitled by the terms of said contract to receive from defendant and be paid the following prices and sums, viz.:
“Two hundred feet 24-inch sewer pipe at $1.25, $250.00; two hundred and forty feet 15-ineh sewer pipe at 65 cents, $156.00; two hundred and twenty feet 12-ineh sewer pipe at 55 cents, $121.00; twenty-three ells of 15-inch 2 pa by G. Matt, at $1.25, $26.25; nine tees of 24 inch sewer pipe at $3.50, $31.50; nine sewer inlets, $108.00; nine catch-basins, $225.00.
[567]*567“Said plaintiff had all his materials on the ground for the construction of said catch basins and had completed the one at said alley and said work was being done under the direction and superintendence of the city engineer of said city and the committee on drainage of the council of said city, and thereupon said engineer and committee being of opinion that said sewer pipe catch-basins would not answer the purpose intended, directed the plaintiff instead thereof, to construct at said eight corners cistern patch-basins with McDonald tops, and agreed to pay him for such change and the necessary labor and materials to make the same, the sum of $25 apiece or together $200.
“And the plaintiff says that in pursuance of said direction and agreement he completed said contract and made said changes and furnished all the necessary labor and material therefor, which was of the cost and value, of $25 apiece or $200, and the same was so done with the knowledge of said defendant and its officers and agents other than said engineer and said committee and since the construction thereof said defendant has possessed and used and still and now possósses and uses said catch basins, and by reason of the premises there became and was due to the plaintiff on account of said original contract and said modifications and extras thereof as aforesaid, the sum of $1,117.75, but said defendant, although often requested so to do, has hitherto failed and refused to pay plaintiff said sum or any part thereof except $723 and the whole balance thereof, to-wit: $394.75, with interest thereon from the first day of January, A. D. 1892, is still due to him and unpaid for and for which he asks judgment against defendant. Wherefore the said [568]*568plaintiff prays judgment against said defendant for said sum of three hundred and ninety-four dollars and seventy-five cents, together with interest thereon from the 1st day of January, A. D. 1892.”

The petition does not disclose the terms of this contract, nor the circumstances under which it was made. Had this been done, the character of the contract, whether legal or illegal, would have appeared, and its validity could have been determined by a demurrer to the* petition.

Doubtless an apprehension of the result that might follow such a course was the moving cause that induced the able and experienced counsel for the contractor to refrain from setting forth more specifically the contract and the manner in which it was made. A motion to require the plaintiff below to make his petition more definite and certain, by setting forth the terms of the contract, was made and overruled in the court of common pleas. The city then interposed a demurrer to the petition on the ground that it did not state a cause of action. The demurrer was overruled, and thereupon the city answered, denying the validity of the contract under which the work was alleged to have been done and the material furnished, and also denying that such work or material were of the value alleged.

An inspection of the petition will show that the claim of the contractor exceeded $1,100.00, $200.00 of which accrued from work authorized by a modification of the original contract. The circumstances under which the modification of the original contract was made are set forth with reasonable clearness, but the petition is silent concerning the terms of the original and principal [569]*569contract itself. The petition simply states that: “The plaintiff was engaged in performing his contract duly made with the defendant to put in twenty-four inch sewers across said Columbus and Broad streets at their intersection with Mill street,” etc. This averment shows simply that at the time the contract was modified, the plaintiff was performing a contract “duly made” with the city, but contains no word as to its terms. If it appeared that the plaintiff had been paid in full for all the work, etc., performed under the principal (original) contract and was seeking only to recover what had accrued under the modification, the averment might have been sufficient, but this was not the case. His right rested on both. The existence and terms of the original contract were as necessary to his recovery as were those of the modification. The right of the city in this respect was to be advised as to the whole claim of the contractor. It was entitled to know just what, according to the plaintiff’s version of the contract, he was to do and what obligations it imposed on the city— that it might admit or take issue upon those terms according to its understanding of their truth or falsity.

Certainly no principle of pleading is more firmly established than that one who founds his cause of action upon a contract must set forth that contract, at least in all cases where a quantum meruit will not lie. The amount involved in the contract in question exceeded $500, and according to the principles hereafter to be announced a special contract was indispensable to a recovery against the city.

The motion should have been sustained.

In view of the principles hereinafter announced doubts will at once arise respecting the sufficiency [570]*570of the petition and the correctness of the action of the court of common pleas in overruling the demurrer to it. But as the real qustion in the case is whether the contract under which recovery was sought was legal and valid, and as the answer controverts this validity, andas the circumstances upon which its validity depends are found in the bill of exceptions, that question will be determined according to the undisputed facts there disclosed, rather than by a review of the holding on the demurrer which would confine us to such facts or rather absence of facts as may be found in the petition.

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Bluebook (online)
58 Ohio St. (N.S.) 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-lancaster-v-miller-ohio-1898.