Continental Construction Co. v. City of Lawrence

2 Mass. App. Div. 27
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 22, 1937
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Mass. App. Div. 27 (Continental Construction Co. v. City of Lawrence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Construction Co. v. City of Lawrence, 2 Mass. App. Div. 27 (Mass. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Wilson, J.

This was an action of contract to recover compensation for the use of certain trucks and tractors [28]*28hired of the plaintiff by the Director of Engineering of the defendant city and used in plowing and removing snow from the streets of the defendant city on February 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 17, 1935.

At the trial there was evidence tending to show that the account upon which this action is based is an accurate account of the use to which said trucks and tractors were put, and the dates when they were used and amount and value of such use. It was admitted that the Director of Engineering was the proper officer to order the use of said trucks and tractors and that snow removal was one of the duties of his department. It was agreed that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the full amount in the declaration if, in view of the questions of law involved, it was entitled to recover anything.

That the agreement for the use of the trucks and tractors was entered into in pursuance of the following order of the City Council passed unanimously on January 28,1935:

“Whereas: Due to the conditions of the City because of the extreme amount of snow, an extreme emergency involving the health and safety of the people is hereby declared;
Therefore, be it ordered: That the Director of Engineering be, and hereby is ordered to take all necessary means and expend any amounts of money necessary to expeditiously and thoroughly relieve these conditions.”

That there was no special appropriation made for executing said order, and none was made during the year 1935 covering snow plowing and removal, except in the annual budget.

The annual budget was adopted on February 18, 1935, and thereafter approved by the Emergency Finance Board, and contained an item of $95,000' for “Snow and Sanding,” which item was that to which snow removal charges were [29]*29chargeable under the system of bookkeeping nsed by the defendant city.

Under the system then obtaining, payrolls for labor were presented and paid weekly and other bills were presented not later than the fifth of the following month and paid the twentieth of that month.

That the claim of the plaintiff, examined and approved by the Director of Engineering and the City Auditor, together with others for snow removal, came before the City Council sitting as a committee of accounts on March 9, 1935. That it then appeared that of the appropriation of $95,000, there remained unexpended only $5496.67, and unpaid claims for snow removal in February, including the plaintiff’s claim, amounted to $17,984.14; that it was thereupon voted to approve all said claims, including that of the plaintiff now before the Court.

The report recites that after the indebtedness to the plaintiff was incurred, which we assume means the use of the plaintiff’s trucks and tractors, to be completed, several items, for the most part payrolls, were charged to the “Snow and Sanding” appropriation and amounting in all to $16,914.96. It does not appear from the report when these claims were incurred.

That the amount of expenditures for snow removal by the Department of Engineering for February, 1935, was $66,181.36, and largest sum expended for similar purposes during any one month of the year 1934 was $34,336.31.

Other than the adoption of the emergency order by the ■City Council, there was no evidence as to whether or not an extreme emergency existed.

The plaintiff seasonably presented the following requests for rulings, all of which the trial court refused and found for the defendant:

[30]*301. That upon the evidence, an extreme emergency had been declared by the entire City G-overnment of the defendant city on January 28, 1935.
2. That in an extreme emergency involving the health or safety of persons or property, a city department may incur liability in excess of appropriations. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) Chapter 44, Section 31.
3. That the plaintiff corporation’s liability against the defendant city was incurred during this extreme emergency involving the safety of persons and property and is a legal liability which the defendant city is obliged to pay.
4. That as a matter of law, the plaintiff corporation was legally employed by the defendant City of Lawrence through its Commissioner of Engineering, and that under the charter of the City of Lawrence, Section 40, the Commissioner of Engineering has exclusively the powers imposed by law on Surveyors of Highways.
5. That as a matter of law, the Commissioner of Engineering, with the powers of a Highway Surveyor must remove obstacles in the highway and the expense must be paid by the municipality. G. L. (T. E.) Chapter 84, Section 7. 174 Mass. 450.
6. That as a matter of law, there is no insufficiency of appropriation at this time to pay the plaintiff corporation the compensation due it.
7. That upon the evidence the Court must find that there is in the appropriation of defendant city, made for the purpose of “Snow Removal 1935” a sum sufficient to pay the plaintiff corporation in this action the compensation due it.
8. That the defendant cannot escape liability under the contract legally made by failing to make a sufficient appropriation to meet the requirements thereof.
Smith v. Inhabitants of Dedham, 144 Mass. 177.
G. M. Byrnes Co. v. Barnstable, 286 Mass. 544.
9. That upon the evidence, payments of liabilities incurred after the plaintiff corporation’s liability, have been paid by the City of Lawrence from “Snow Removal” appropriation 1935.
10. That upon the evidence and upon the law, judgment must be returned for the plaintiff corporation in the amount of the declaration.

[31]*31The trial court made certain “Special Findings of Facts.” He found the order of the City Council above set out, was passed by unanimous vote, and further so found as follows:

“No special appropriation was made for executing the above order, and no appropriation was made during the year 1935 covering snow plowing and snow removal except in the annual budget.
“Other than the record of the above vote, there was no evidence to show that an extreme emergency existed, involving the health and safety of the people, and I rule that the plaintiff has not sustained the burden of proving the fact that such an emergency existed.
“The total amount of work ordered and done in snow plowing and snow removal by the Department of Engineering for the month of February 1935 was $66,191.36. The highest sum expended for similar purposes during any one month of the year 1934 was $34,336.31.
“All items in the account annexed to the plaintiff’s declaration were for plowing snow and removing snow from the streets of the defendant.
“The plaintiff submitted its claim to the City Council, the same having previously been examined and approved by the Director of the Department of Engineering and the City Auditor.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Mass. App. Div. 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-construction-co-v-city-of-lawrence-massdistctapp-1937.