Friese v. City of Edmonds

290 P. 856, 158 Wash. 316, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 681
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 26, 1930
DocketNo. 22523. Department One.
StatusPublished

This text of 290 P. 856 (Friese v. City of Edmonds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Friese v. City of Edmonds, 290 P. 856, 158 Wash. 316, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 681 (Wash. 1930).

Opinion

Tolman, J.

Appellant, as plaintiff, brought this action to restrain the city of Edmonds and its officers from carrying out a certain contract set forth in the complaint and from making any expenditure of public funds thereunder. A demurrer to the plaintiff’s *317 amended complaint was interposed and sustained. The plaintiff elected to stand on his complaint, and a judgment of dismissal followed, from which he has appealed.

The amended complaint, in addition to formal allegations, pleads that, on July 3, 1928, the council of the respondent city duly passed ordinance No. 404 providing for the acquiring, construction and maintenance of a municipal water works system for the city, and that the proposition be submitted to the voters for adoption or rejection. At a special election held for that purpose, the plan submitted by the ordinance was adopted by the voters, and that plan, in effect, is that the city acquire the necessary water rights, lands, springs, rights of way, reservoir, standpipe, sites, etc., for a municipal water works plant, the source of the water supply to consist of three or more wells, several hundred feet apart, to be located in the east central portion of the city; that special revenue water bonds in the sum of $130,000 and general bonds in the sum of $20,000 be issued, sold and the proceeds used in the purchase and construction of such a system. Thereafter the city proceeded in accordance with the terms of the ordinance and expended approximately $130,000 in constructing its diversion system; that it drilled two wells at an expense of $20,000, without obtaining an adequate supply of water, and that the city is now using water obtained from the site of a private owner which operated a private water system in the city prior tp November, 1928, and that such source of supply is still available.

It is further pleaded that the city has long since expended all of the proceeds of the bonds authorized, and more, but from what source the excess was obtained does not appear. It is alleged that the city council had authorized the mayor and city clerk to enter into an *318 agreement on behalf of the city with the Pnmp Equipment Company, a corporation, and that the city officers did, accordingly, on December 27, 1929, enter into a written contract which is set out as an exhibit to the complaint. This contract, omitting formal parts, is as follows:

“That for and in consideration of the mutual promises and conveyances herein contained and the monthly rentals hereinafter designated, the parties hereto do mutually agree as follows:
“That the lessor does hereby agree to dig or drill, at the lessor’s option, two wells for the discovery of water upon those two particular sites owned by the lessee and described as follows: (Description omitted)
“(1) (Description omitted) The lessor guarantees that the combined capacity of said wells shall be such amount as may be required by the lessee for its municipal water system, not exceeding, however, a maximum capacity of three hundred (300) gallons per minute. The lessor agrees that said wells shall be sunk by it within a period of 120 days after the date of this contract, excluding Sundays, full holidays or days when the weather or elements are such as would not permit the work and excluding delays on account of strikes; said period may be extended for such reasonable time as the parties may mutually agree upon. It is understood and agreed that in the event that said wells, after the expiration of said period or any reasonable extension thereof, or because of acts of Grod or forces beyond the lessor’s control, do not produce required amount of water, that all liability of the parties hereto shall cease and this lease shall immediately become null and void and the liability of the lessor shall be limited entirely to the expense of attempting to produce said capacity. Should the water produced in said wells be of such quality as is not suitable for use for domestic purposes by the inhabitants of the lessee city, then this lease shall become null and void as above provided.
“(2) In the event water of sufficient quantity and quality is discovered in said wells, the lessor agrees to *319 install in and upon said wells two (2) Pomona Turbine pumps having a combined maximum capacity of three hundred (300) gallons per minute and capable of delivering water at that rate to the existing high reservoir in the city of Edmonds; also to furnish all necessary electrical appliances, including overload and un-dervoltage starter, time delay-relay, float switch, control wiring from the float to motors and B-X cable and conduit necessary to make the electrical hook-up from the motors to the various appliances and to construct concrete foundations for said pumps; also to furnish all labor necessary to install said pumps from the suction strainer in the bottoms of the wells to and including the pump discharge head and discharge outlet.
“(3) The lessee agrees to erect at its own expense, pump houses with concrete floors for the housing of said pumps, said concrete floors to be sufficient to carry the concrete foundations of the respective pumps; to furnish all valves, fittings and pipe and the labor necessary to run pipe from the pumps discharge outlet to the reservoir. The lessee further agrees to superintend during the entire term of the lease as hereinafter set forth, the proper oiling of said pumps and equipment by its water superintendent, who shall have been properly instructed in the care and maintenance of said pumps and equipment by the lessor and agrees that in the event of a breakdown or other failure of said pumping equipment to properly function, to immediately give notice thereof to the lessor, to the end that the latter may immedately remedy the trouble.
“(4) The lessee, the city of Edmonds, does hereby specifically agree to pay as a rental for said pumping equipment and the water produced thereby, the sum of one hundred and sixty-three dollars ($163) per month, commencing with the time when water is produced to the city’s connection at the pump discharge outlet on the first well, and on the 10th day of each and every month thereafter for a period of five (5) years from the date of the first payment.
“The lessee further agrees to pay for all electric power used in the operation of said pumps and equipment during the entire term of this lease; also assign *320 and transfer to the lessor full title and interest in and to the twenty horse power Lane & Boler turbine pump with all electrical appliances now appurtenant thereto as part of the consideration for this lease.
“(5) The lessor guarantees said pumps and equipment against all defects in material and workmanship, and the labor necessary for the repair or installation of repair parts for the first year in the term of this lease, and to furnish to the lessee a good and sufficient bond in the penal sum of $2,500 conditioned upon the full and faithful performance of this contract, and in the payment of all labor, mechanic’s and subcontractors and material men and all persons who shall supply provisions- or supplies for the carrying on of any of the work in connection with this contract.

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172 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1898)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
290 P. 856, 158 Wash. 316, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friese-v-city-of-edmonds-wash-1930.