Durand v. Cline

119 P.2d 891, 63 Idaho 304, 1941 Ida. LEXIS 79
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1941
DocketNo. 6924.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 119 P.2d 891 (Durand v. Cline) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Durand v. Cline, 119 P.2d 891, 63 Idaho 304, 1941 Ida. LEXIS 79 (Idaho 1941).

Opinion

GIVENS, J.

— The council of the city of Moscow by ordinance called an election on the proposal to issue $65,-000 in bonds “for the purpose of improving the waterworks system of the City of Moscow and building a water storage tank,” “to provide a more adequate water supply for the city and better fire protection,” “said contemplated improvements consist principally of the erection of an *307 elevated water storage tank of approximately 500,000 gallons capacity, together with any and all mains, valves, gates, connections and fixtures necessary to connect said tank with the present water system of the City of Moscow, together with the improvements or extension of certain water mains.” The people voted the bonds, which were issued and sold. Whereupon, by contract with the city, appellant agreed to drill a well for $1 per inch in diameter per foot depth. Appellant drilled to a depth of 800 feet, no adequate supply of water being then obtained. The city in partial payment on such contract issued its warrant for $1,000. The city treasurer refused payment. Appellant sued for a writ of mandate in the district court to compel payment of the warrant. Certain taxpayers intervened, aligning themselves with respondent. Upon a stipulation of facts, the court quashed the alternative writ and dismissed the action, hence this appeal.

In oral argument, while adverting to the fact that such plans and specifications as the city engineer had submitted to the council did not, as shown by the stipulation of facts, mention or describe any well, we understood counsel for respondent to not now stress that such plans were so deficient under 49-332 I. C. A. as to bar respondent from recovery herein, and said statute is not cited or referred to in respondent’s brief, hence it is unnecessary to consider such feature further, because neither article 8, section 3, of the constitution, or any of the bond statutes (49-2402-3, 49-2411, 55-203, 55-220) require as a prerequisite to or concomitant part of the election, plans or specifications. The bond issue is one thing; the contracts to carry out the purpose of the bond issue are another. There is herein no question of the legality of the bonds.

Respondent agrees with appellant that there are but two questions, the first of which is decisive because of our conclusion thereon: “Did the city have authority to expend a part of the money derived from the sale of the bonds in improving the water system by drilling the well in question ?”

Respondents’ contentions challenging the validity of the contract are that the terms of the ordinance calling for the *308 election on the bond issue did not mention or refer to a well and did not generally contemplate or give notice that a well was to be part of the improvements in connection with the enlargement of the waterworks and that no plans and specifications mentioned a well, and that only a dry hole has been drilled, which is not an improvement.

Before water may be stored, it must be obtained; hence, the building of storage facilities, tanks or reservoirs, would necessarily presuppose and contemplate acquiring by some means and from some source water to place therein. The stipulation shows that prior to the present controversy and the contemplated improvements Moscow secured its supply of water from wells, stored in aerial tanks. If enough water was already available from the existing wells to fill the contemplated tank as well as those already constructed, no new water supply need be obtained and vice versa.

The contention that because the well is thus far dry it is not an improvement, hence not within the purview of the bond issue, is premature. Respondents interfered with the drilling of the well, appellant being ready, willing, and able to continue, and the city being agreeable thereto; and what may ultimately, within reasonable limits, be obtained by continued drilling is the criteria. At this time we are not called upon to fix such limits. One might as well say a tank without water to fill it is no improvement, hence could not be built. Sound judgment would clearly seem to dictate that a flowing well had best be drilled before erecting a container therefor. An empty tank and water mains with no supply of water to fill them would seem as void of benefit to a municipality as an empty or dry well. Respondents urge the appellants are interested in the delivery of water; true, but there can be no delivery of water without water to deliver. Pursuing such metaphysical legerdemain pro or con would be as devoid of result herein as the dry well and as fruitless as a disquisition upon the age-old query as to which came first, the chicken or the egg.

The first case bearing on the sufficiency and scope of an ordinance of intention in connection with a bond issue *309 for municipal waterworks and work done thereunder and sufficiently in point to be closely analogous is Corker v. Village of Mountain Home, 20 Ida. 32, 116 Pac. 108, wherein, speaking through Justice Ailshie, the court said:

“The next objection is ‘that bonds for the construction of a waterworks system have been included in a notice for bonds for the purchase of water rights for power purposes without specifying the amount to be devoted for the construction of a waterworks system or purchase of water rights.’ This objection is answered by what we have said with reference to the first question presented. It would doubtless have been impossible for the village authorities to designate the amount of money they would be obliged to expend in procuring water rights, or the particular amount that it would be necessary to expend for power purposes or that which would be expended directly and primarily in the construction of the waterworks.’ On the other hand, it will be the duty of the village authorities to expend such sum as may be necessary and essential for each of these incidental and subsidiary necessities in order to accomplish the main purpose.

It is lastly contended by the appellant ‘that the notice of election fails to correctly or legally state the purpose for which the election was called, and in fact states a purpose unknown and foreign to the purpose declared in said ordinance.’ In cases of this kind, it is not necessary that the purpose for which the election is to be held and the bond issue is to be authorized should be stated in any exact form or specific language; but the test of the sufficiency or validity of a notice or ordinance in this respect is, whether the voters at the general election held pursuant to the ordinance and notice can be reasonably presumed from the notice itself and the ordinance to have understood the question submitted to them. There can be no reasonable doubt in this case but that the electors of Mountainhome knew and understood perfectly well that the purpose of this election was to determine whether or not the qualified voters would authorize the village authorities to issue the coupon bonds of the village of Mountainhome for the sum of $35,000, in order to construct and install a waterworks system for the use of the *310 inhabitants of that village, and that this purpose included all the necessary and incidental means that might be covered by or included in the main object to be attained, namely, a sufficient supply of water for the use of the village and the inhabitants thereof [citing authorities]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City of Challis v. Consent of the Governed Caucus
361 P.3d 485 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2015)
City of Idaho Falls v. Fuhriman
237 P.3d 1200 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2010)
Lind v. Rockland School Dist. No. 382
821 P.2d 983 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1991)
Asson v. City of Burley
670 P.2d 839 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1983)
Kerner v. Johnson
583 P.2d 360 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 P.2d 891, 63 Idaho 304, 1941 Ida. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durand-v-cline-idaho-1941.