City of Springfield v. Haydon

288 S.W. 337, 216 Ky. 483, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 979
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 26, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 337 (City of Springfield v. Haydon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Springfield v. Haydon, 288 S.W. 337, 216 Ky. 483, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 979 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Commissioner Hobson —

Reversing on original appeal; affirming on cross-appeal.

The city council of Spring-field on March 6, 1925, enacted an ordinance for the improvement of Main street and Main cross street, as therein set out. Due notice was given; three bids were made for the contract; the city -council accepted the lowest hid, hut before the contract was signed a taxpayer brought a suit in the Washington circuit court attaching the validity of the ordi *485 nance and praying an injunction restraining the council from proceeding further. The clerk granted a temporary restraining order. When court came on other taxpayers filed an intervening petition, setting out more fully the grounds for an injunction. On the hearing the •court discharged the temporary restraining order granted by the clerk and refused to grant an injunction. An application was then made to a judge of this court; the ease came before the eastern division and an order was entered overruling the motion. The intervening plaintiffs after this amended their petition, alleging other grounds for the relief sought, and alleging more fully the grounds theretofore set up. On final hearing the circuit court held the ordinance invalid and granted the plaintiffs a permanent injunction as prayed in their petition, on the ground that the ordinance was void. In the meantime the contractor had closed his contract and finished a large part of the work. The city and the contractor prosecute the appeal before us and the intervening plaintiffs prosecute a cross-appeal.

The contract was for the reconstruction of the streets. After the base and top were prepared, as specified in the ordinance, a wearing surface of Kentucky rock asphalt was required to be laid thereon as specified. The •only question as to the validity of the ordinance which was considered by the circuit court is as to its requirement of Kentucky rock asphalt. Its provisions, so far as material, are as follows:

“The Kentucky rock asphalt shall be the standard Kentucky rock brand of natural bituminous sandstone which has been mined or quarried from proven deposits of bituminous sandstone in Edmonson county, in the state of Kentucky, and shall be from a site or a place in a geological formation that has produced standard Kentucky rock asphalt which has been i¿sed as a successful paving material for a period of five (5) years immediately preceding this date.
“The rock asphalt shall be composed of natural asphalt and silica sand as herein specified and shall be used as produced, with no preparation other than crushing and grinding to the proper consistency as standardized by the Kentucky Rock Asphalt 'Com *486 pany. Each, proposal shall be accompanied by a service'affidavit naming* the brand or the producing company of the material proposed to be used and citing three or more states, counties, or roadways where this material is at this date in good serviceable condition after five years of use under present-day traffic, without maintenance or repair due to inherent defects of the material proposed to be used.
“No bitumen, sand or other material shall be added to or mechanically mixed with the natural rock asphalt. The rock asphalt shall be so crushed and pulverized that when tested by means of laboratory sieves it shall meet the following* requirements. . . . ” (Here specifications follow).

In several other places in the' ordinance, in speaking* of the rock asphalt to be used, it is called Kyrock, which is the trade name of the asphalt produced from the mine of the Kentucky Rock Asphalt Company in Edmonson county. While it is shown that there are several companies getting out Kentucky rock asphalt of the same quality as that mined by the Kentucky Rock Asphalt Company, none of these companies had been doing business for five years when the ordinance was passed and their product is not sold in the market as Kyrock. The circuit court was of opinion that the ordinance limiting the construction of the surface of the street to the asphalt rock mined by the Kentucky Rock Asphalt Company rendered the ordinance void. That company is not in the business of building streets. Its only business is mining the rock and selling it on the open market. It also appears that its prices for its rock were practically the same as the prices then charged by the other companies for their rock; although it does appear that one of these companies would have sold its rock one dollar a ton cheaper in order to get this contract, if its rock had come within the specifications. The ordinance was drawn, as appears from the testimony of the councilmen, because streets had been constructed at Bardstown, at Lebanon and at Stanford of this rock. These streets had stood well and the members of the council thought it best to order the construction from, a rock which they knew would stand and not to run the risk of getting an inferior asphalt.

*487 While there is some'conflict of authority on the question the result of the weight of authority is thus stated in 19 R. C. 358, in these words:

“In other jurisdictions the opposite view is taken, on the ground that it would bring about a harmful result which the legislature cannot be sup1posed to have intended if the public should in effect be barred from taking advantage of recent inventions or obtaining beneficial improvements because they were covered by an authorized patent, or were the product of an exclusive manufacture, and the producer did not find it necessary to underbid his less well equipped competitors, and it is accordingly held that an advertisement for bids may lawfully specify an article covered by a patent or a trade name, if the article is different from other products and may fairly be considered superior in quality.”

A number of authorities are collected sustaining the text. To same effect see also the following: Milner v. City of Trenton, 80 N. J. Law 253; Mueller v. Boulevard Commissioners, 87 N. J. Law 702; Sherrett v. City of Portland, 62 Ore. 101; Adams v. Van Zandt, 199 N. Y. S. 225; Wurdeman v. City of Columbus, 158 N. W. 924, Rhodes v. Board of Public Works, 10 Col. Ap. 99. The reason for the rule is thus stated in the case last cited:

“If the whole of some certain kind of property which is in demand, is owned by a single individual, it could be of no benefit to him to continue to hold it indefinitely. The' presumption is that he desires to convert it into money, and that he will sell it to others. In a majority of instances, the successful competitor for a contract is not himself the owner of the material necessary for the purposes of his contract, but must purchase it from the person or persons having it, and if there is only one such person,it must be purchased from him. It would be contrary to experience to assume that, whether the ma-' terial is ill one ownership or several, it cannot be purchased. The fact that some particular material in common use is the subject of exclusive ownership, furnishes in itself no sufficient reason why, with reference to that material, there could not be genuine competition between individuals or companies un *488 connected with, each other.” Rhodes v. Board of Public Works, 10 Col. R. 112.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 337, 216 Ky. 483, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 979, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-springfield-v-haydon-kyctapphigh-1926.