City of Tulsa v. Weston

1924 OK 578, 229 P. 108, 102 Okla. 222, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 180
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 27, 1924
Docket13313
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1924 OK 578 (City of Tulsa v. Weston) 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 Tulsa v. Weston, 1924 OK 578, 229 P. 108, 102 Okla. 222, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 180 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

BRANSON, J.

The action on which the judgment in this cause was predicated, was begun , on the 27 th day of January, 1922, by the plaintiffs, Beatrice J. Weston, E. V. Raper, H. E. Dowd, Oliver W. Culver, C. R. Loomis, Sr., Alice McDaniels, John Q. Chambers, and George B. Stanley, filing a petition in the district court of Tulsa county, Okla., against the city of Tulsa, Okla., T. D. Evans, mayor of the city of Tulsa, Okla., H. F. Newblock, O. A. Steiner, and J. M. Adkison, commissioners, Mrs. Frank Seaman, city auditor, and Tibbets 6 Pleasant, a copartnership, composed of Tibbets and Pleasant, paving contractors. Subsequently thereto, an amended petition was filed by Beatrice J. Weston, E. v; Raper, Edna B. Loomis, A. AY. Severs, Marie Travis, Brady-Wright -Addition Company, a corporation, J. D. Scott, Lewis A. Leonard, F. E. Striker, Ida Lewkowitz, G. A.. Rutherford, Vandever Investment Company, a corporation, Charles L. Uptgraft, John Q. Chambers, Herbert Storck, Oliver W. Culver, H. E. Dowd, and Olive Palmer, as plaintiffs, and city of Tulsa, a municipal corporation, T. D. Evans, mayor, O. A. Steiner, commissioner of streets and public property, C. S. Younkman, commissioner of water and sewers, H. F. New-block, commissioner of finance and revenue, J. M. Adkison, commissioner of police and fire, Mrs. Frank Seaman, city auditor, Tibbets & Pleasant, Inc., a corporation, and Southern Surety Company, a corporation, and C. E. Griggs, city engineer, as defendant. To the amended petition the officers of the city, ' Tibbets & Pleasant, and the Southern Surety Company, filed answer, to which the plaintiffs filed reply.

The substantial and vital parts of the pleadings will be set out herein, to the end that the issues raised may be clearly understood. The lawsuit grows out of a paving contract, entered into on the 26th day of April, 1921, with the defendants, Tibbets & Pleasant, Inc., by the city of Tulsa, under which contract the said defendants agreed and bound themselves, under the conditions of said contract, to pave a certain street in the city of Tulsa, which had been designated as paving district 297 of said city. Plaintiffs’ amended petition stated in effect:

That plaintiffs were property owners in the city of Tulsa, and residents of said city, and that the city was duly incorporated under the laws of the state of Oklahoma, and that the individual defendants named as officers were officers of said city, and that Tibbets & Pleasant, Inc., were paving contractors, and that the defendant the Southern Surety Company, was a corporation engaged in executing surety bonds, and that improvement district 297 embraced “Easton Court (Columbia) from the east line of Xenophon avenue to the west line of Union avenue, in said city of Tulsathat the said contract provided for the payment of said district with vibrolithic concrete pavement; that it was the duty 9f the defendant Griggs, as city engineer, to at once prepare a written statement, after the execution of the contract, containing the names of the owners of the property abutting upon the street in said district, the number of front feet owned by each property owner, with an estimate of tile total cost of the improvements of the district, which statement *224 should also show the proportion and amount of such total cost to be assessed against the property of each owner; and that it was the duty of the defendants the board of commissioners of the city of Tulsa to give the notice provided for and hereinafter set out, of the determination of said board to assess the cost against the property in the district, and setting a date for hearing thereof, to the end that the property owners should have-an opportunity to file their objections as to matters affecting the property, and the benefits thereto of the improvements, or any irregularity or invalidity in any of ti e proceedings in reference to the making of the improvements, and to be heard thereon, and to the further end that they might bring a suit to contest on any ground the validity of the proceedings that may have been had, and that the defendant Griggs, as city engineer, failed, neglected, and refused to prepare such statement, and that the board of commissioners neglected and refused to give such notice and afford such hearing until after the work was completed and abeepted, and plaintiffs were thereby kept in ignorance of the facts of the alleged cost of said improvements, and the amount the commissioners determined to assess upon the property of the plaintiffs in said paving district; that the amount proposed to be assessed included certain illegal, unauthorized, and erroneous charges against the property of the plaintiffs; that the price at which the assessment was intended to be made was unreasonable and 'excessive.

Thereupon they specifically plead:

“8 That the contract' for the pavement of Easton Place in district 297 and in all the other districts above mentioned, required the contractor to maintain the work in good condition for 5 years, at the cost of the contractor. The separate cost of such maintenance is not segregated, 'but is included in the assessment ¡sought to be imposed upon the property abutting upon the streets and avenues in the said district. Whereas, the maintenance of the said street pavement is a proper charge against the city at large, and an illegal and erroneous charge is thereby sought to be imposed upon the plaintiffs, and other property owners in the district. * * * That the further Charge against the property owners in district 297 * * * of 5 per cent, of the contract price for engineering for the said improvements, amounts to about $900, and in district 297, * * * is illegal, and not a proper charge against the plaintiffs and other property owners to. be assessed therefor, as the surveying and engineering of the improvements were performed by the engineer of the city, and his assistants, who were appointed for ■ a definite period, at a fixed salary, which the law requires to be paid out of the general funds of the cit~. and the .reasonable cost of such surveying and engineering cannot be ascertained and assessed upon the abutting property as a necessary expenditure for the improvements. That the expenditure of any such sum for surveying and engineering in the district * * * was far in excess of any possible requirements in the performance of the work called for by the resolutions and contracts relating to the improvements.
“9. That the defendant, C. E.

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Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 578, 229 P. 108, 102 Okla. 222, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-tulsa-v-weston-okla-1924.