Commercial Nat. Bank v. Robinson

1917 OK 520, 168 P. 810, 66 Okla. 235, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 187
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 6, 1917
Docket6997
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1917 OK 520 (Commercial Nat. Bank v. Robinson) 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
Commercial Nat. Bank v. Robinson, 1917 OK 520, 168 P. 810, 66 Okla. 235, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 187 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

BLEAKMORE, C.

This ease presents error from the district court of Payne county, wherein the plaintiff in error, as assignee of the Dudley Construction Company, sought by mandamus to compel the mayor and commissioners of the city of Stillwater to deliver to it certain improvement bonds issued conform-ably to the provisions of article 12, c. 10, Revised Laws 1910. In answer to the alternative writ the city officials attempted to justify refusal to deliver the bonds solely on the ground that the contractor had failed to perform the contract by refusal to pay certain claims for labor and material. Numerous persons asserting demand against the Dudley Construction Company for labor and materials, and one who declared upon a subcontract for the paving of a street upon which his property abutted, were permitted to intervene. On ‘trial, the court belovr, *236 made- the following, among other, findings of fact:

“(1) That said Dudley Construction Company has failed to perform its contract in the matter of paying the claims of laborers and materialmen arising out of the prosecution of the work, involving said contraer, and would not be entitled to a delivery ox the -bonds by reason of such failure; (2) that the assignee of said Dudley Construction Company, the plaintiff herein, stands in the place of said Dudley Construction Company, and is therefore not entitled to a delivery of said bonds.”

The writ was denied.

The undisputed facts necessary to a determination of the case are that the mayor and commissioners of the city of Stillwater, having determined to improve certain streets by regular proceedings, issued improvement bonds, and entered into a contract with the Dudley Construction Company, by the terms of which such bonds were to be delivered to the contractor- at par value in payment of jhe amount due it on such contract; that the improvements were made according to contract and accepted by the city, and a portion of such bonds delivered; that the remainder of the bonds of the par value of $15,000, was retained by the mayor and commissioners, who, after proper demand therefor, refused to turn the same over to the plaintiff.

We are of opinion that the judgment of the trial court, denying a peremptory writ of mandamus, constituted prejudicial error. It is contended by defendants, in error that the writ should not go for the reason that the plaintiff in error had a plain, speedy, ana adequate remedy in the ordinary course or law. Obviously no action for' debt or breacn of contract would lie against the city or its mayor and commissioners, for the reason that the contract price of the improvements in question was payable alone in the specific bonds, delivery of which is sought to be compelled, and neither these bonds nor the obligation to pay for such improvements is or could become a charge against the city payable out of its general funds. The bonds were issued pursuant to section 636, Rev. Laws 1910, which provides:

“Said bonds, or such portion thereof as may be necessary to provide for the payment of thé assessments, interest, and costs remaining unpaid, shall be sold at not less than par, and the proceeds thereof applied to the payment of the contract price of sala improvement and the other expense incurred by the city in connection with such improvement or issuance. of such bonds; or such bonds, in the amount -that may be necessary for such purpose, may -be turned over and delivered to the contractor at par value in payment of the amount due him on his contract. * * *”

By section 635 it is provided:

“* * * Which bonds shall in no event become a liability of the city issuing the same.”

Under the terms of the statute, the municipal officers were empowered either to sell, the bonds and -pay for the improvements out of the proceeds, of to deliver such bonds to the contractor at par in' satisfaction of the amount due him on his contract. By entering into- the contract in suit such officers chose the alternative of paying the contract- or by delivery of the bonds. The specific bonds provided for by the contract to be delivered had been duly issued, and delivery thereof as provided by the statute was refused solely for the purpose of coercing payment by the contractor of certain claims of laborers and materialmen, for which the municipality was not bound and about which it was not legally concerned. Wilson v. Nelson, 54 Okla. 457, 153 Pac. 1179. We recognize the rule that the mandamus does not lie to enforce mere contractual duties; that its proper function is to compel that performance of duties incumbent by law upon the parties against whom the writ is sought, but, under the circumstances of this case, are of opinion that the municipal officers in declining to deliver the bonds in question not only defaulted as to. the terms of the contract, but arbitrarily refused to perform a plain ministerial duty imposed upon them by law, and plaintiff rightly invoked the coercive powers of the court to compel the performance of such duty. A remedy at law which will operate as a bar to mandamus must ordinarily be such as will enforce the right or compel the performance of the duty; and the remedy is not plain and adequate unless it is commensurate with the necessities and rights of the complaining party under all the circumstances of the case. In the instant case we do not regard replevin as a plain and adequate remedy. Although it is an action designed for the recovery of specific personal property, yet in replevin the defendants might, if they saw fit, by execution of an undertaking, retain the bonds in question, and thus evade the performance of their official duty to deliver them under the terms of the statute.

“A ministerial act is one which a public officer or agent is required to perform upon a given state of facts in a prescribed manner in obedience to the mandate of a legal authority and without regard to his own judgment or opinion concerning the propriety or *237 impropriety of the act performed.” Merrill on- Mandamus, p. 80.

In City of El Reno et al. v. Cleveland-Trinidad Paving Co., 25 Okla. 648, 107 Pac. 163, 27 L. R. A. (N. S.) 650, an action by ithe paving company seeking to enjoin the city authorities from publishing and putting into effect an ordinance repealing a certain assessing ordinance passed for the purpose of providing means to pay for a portion of the city streets, for the performance of which work the company and the city had entered into a contract, this court, speaking through Mr. Justice Kane, said:

‘‘It being settled that all of the proceedings of the city authorities up to the time of letting said contract were regular, after the letting of the contract no discretion of any kind is vested in the city or its municipal council. "Whether its action in declaring a necessity to pave, etc., or in ascertaining that no sufficient protests had been made and determining to proceed with the improvement is legislative or administrative does not concern us in this connection.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 520, 168 P. 810, 66 Okla. 235, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-nat-bank-v-robinson-okla-1917.