Gilmore v. Board of County Commrs.

17 Ohio App. 177, 1922 Ohio App. LEXIS 152
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 16, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 Ohio App. 177 (Gilmore v. Board of County Commrs.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilmore v. Board of County Commrs., 17 Ohio App. 177, 1922 Ohio App. LEXIS 152 (Ohio Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Middleton, J.

This cause comes into this court by appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of [178]*178Hocking county. It is an action in the alternative, for the reformation or rescission of a contract for the construction of a ditch along the line of Rush creek in that county, for a distance of approximately six miles. The plaintiffs herein were successful bidders for the work and entered into a contract to construct the ditch as an entirety for the sum of $52,000. The undisputed evidence establishes that this contract was made by the plaintiffs upon the basis of the estimate of the county engineer, which included an item for excavation of 335,012 cubic yards of dirt, at a cost of 16 cents per cubic yard, making the total estimate on said item $53,601.92. Two other items, one for grubbing and removing trees, amounting to $1,000, and one for removing three bridges and replacing same, amounting to $2,800, made the total estimated cost of the improvement, as fixed by the county engineer, the sum of $57,401.92. In this estimate there was an error of 100,000 cubic yards of dirt to be excavated, the error being solely a mathematical one, occurring through a mistake of a clerk in the engineer’s office in making an addition of the several calculated amounts by sections which went into the aggregate quantity to be excavated. The estimates as aforesaid were announced at public outcry by the county engineer when the work was sold on July 3, 19'20. After obtaining the contract, the plaintiffs began the construction of the ditch, when, some time in February of the following year, it was discovered that the estimate as made by the county surveyor in respect to the amount of excavation was erroneous, and that it would require the excavation of approximately 100,000 cubic yards more to complete the improve[179]*179ment. Notwithstanding the discovery of this mistake the plaintiffs continued to perform their contract until they had excavated the amount of yardage fixed in the estimate, namely, 335,012 cubic yards. There remains to be excavated approximately one mile of the ditch. After the discovery of the mistake the commissioners refused to pay further estimates, having theretofore paid the plaintiffs on the contract the sum of $35,000, and the commissioners are now contending that no further payments should be made until the ditch is wholly finished. At the hearing in the court below it was decreed that by reason of such mistake the contract should be rescinded, and that the plaintiffs should recover in quantum meruit for the work done by them for which they had not been compensated. This amount the court found to be the sum of $14,000.

It is apparent that the plaintiffs in their petition, and the lower court by its action, had a wrong conception of the legal effect of a decree of rescission. Such a decree voids the whole contract, and the parties to the contract stand in relation to each other as if the contract “is not and never was.” It necessarily follows from this that a recovery in quantum meruit must be for the whole amount of work done. This involves proof as to the reasonable value of all the work done. From the value of the whole work, as found from the evidence, there may be taken any payments theretofore made, and a finding made for the amount only, if any, remaining due after the deduction of said payments.

The defendants interpose many objections to the equitable relief prayed for in this action. [180]*180These objections, for the most part, rest upon the contention that the contract in question is a public contract, made in accordance with statutory laws and controlled wholly by such laws. It is urged that by reason of this fact there can be no reformation or rescission of the contract, and that compensation in quantum meruit may not be allowed under the doctrine well settled in this state that there is no implied liability on the part of the public to pay for work or services when a contract for the same has not been made with due observance to all statutory requirements. It is contended by the defendants, in substance, that a court of equity is bound to follow the law, and that it cannot relieve the plaintiffs from their binding legal obligation to do all the work necessary for the construction of this ditch for the sum of $52,-000. They say that this contract was duly made in compliance with the statutes, and the plaintiffs are bound thereby. This requires the determination of the character of the contract involved, and if it is not one beyond the reach of a court of equity it must be conceded that under the established facts the plaintiffs are certainly entitled to relief. If a court of equity has jurisdiction to intervene it would be a humiliating failure of justice if the plaintiffs in this case, without any fault on their part, and solely by reason of the mistake or error of the agent of those who are to be benefited by this improvement, should be compelled to contribute of their means and labor to snid improvement approximately one-fourth of its entire cost.

The construction of this ditch was undertaken bv the county commissioners on the petition of [181]*181parties interested, and in accordance with. Section 6443 ef seq., General Code, as such sections were numbered in 1920. The commissioners found what the damages and compensation in making the improvement should be, and they accordingly were, assessed against the lands to be benefited thereby, excepting the .building of two new bridges. Their finding in this behalf was as follows (Defendants’ Exhibit 2, page 5):

“That said improvement is not of sufficient importance to the public to cause said damages and compensation which have been assessed to be paid out of the county treasury, no more than the board of county commissioners of Hocking county, Ohio, have agreed to build the two new bridges as required by the said improvement.”

Under this finding the ditch became an improvement in which only the assessed landowners were interested, and which, when completed, became their personal property. In the case of Board of County Commissioners of Portage County v. Gates, 83 Ohio St., 19, it is held:

“The county commissioners, sitting as a board, in hearing an application on the part of landowners for the establishment of a ditch, as provided by Section 4447, and following of the Revised Statutes, represent the landowners, ' petitioners, and not the county, where it is found that the improvement is of local interest only, and that the cost and expense should be assessed wholly against the lands benefited.”

Again, on page 31 of the opinion, it is said:

“No finding appears wdiieh relieves the ditch from being simply a private ditch as between the landowners benefited and the public at large, and [182]*182in such case the county has no proprietary interest in the ditch. As held in Commissioners v. Krauss, 53 Ohio St., 631 [632], ‘it belongs to the landowners on whose lands and for whose benefit it was constructed. The commissioners simply acted as a board before whom the necessary proceedings for the construction of the ditch had, by the statute, to be conducted.’ ”

In the case of Commissioners v. Krauss, there referred to, the court further said:

“With the fixing of the time for the sale of the construction of the improvement and the appointment of an engineer to superintend its construction the connection of the county commissioners with the improvement substantially ends.

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Related

In Re the Appeal in Joint County Ditch
110 N.E.2d 144 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1952)
Bell v. State
137 S.W. 670 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio App. 177, 1922 Ohio App. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilmore-v-board-of-county-commrs-ohioctapp-1922.