Green-Boots Const. Co. v. State Highway Commission

1933 OK 521, 25 P.2d 783, 165 Okla. 288, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 313
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 10, 1933
Docket21258
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1933 OK 521 (Green-Boots Const. Co. v. State Highway Commission) 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
Green-Boots Const. Co. v. State Highway Commission, 1933 OK 521, 25 P.2d 783, 165 Okla. 288, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 313 (Okla. 1933).

Opinion

WELCH, J.

This is a mandamus action instituted in the district court of Oklahoma county by plaintiff in error, Green-Boots Construction Company, a corporation, against the State Highway Commission of the state of Oklahoma and Lew Wentz, S. C. Boswell, and L. C. Hutson, composing the State Highway Commission of the state of Oklahoma, and J. Berry King, Attorney General. The parties appear in this court in the same relative position in which they appeared in the lower court, and will be hereinafter referred to as plaintiff and defendants.

Plaintiff seeks a writ of mandamus directing the members of the State Highway Commission to meet and allow plaintiff’s claim in the sum of $155,576.44' as legal charges against the state of Oklahoma arising out of the construction of federal aid projects Nos. 106-A and 107-A in Washington county, Okla., pursuant to the terms of plaintiff’s contract, unless said Commission should question the amount of said claim, in which event that they be directed to grant arbitration of said claim as provided by the terms of the contract with the State Highway Commission and the Attorney General acting as the board of arbitrators, each having one vote, and that they be required to set a day for the hearing on said arbitration and notify the plaintiff of the date thereof, and that they then proceed to grant plaintiff a full and complete hearing of all facts and evidence in support of the correctness of said claim, and that upon such hearing being had, they be required to render such judgment as they believe should be rendered as shown by the evidence.

Upon the petition filed, the court granted an alternative writ of mandamus as prayed therein. The defendants filed their return to the writ wherein they set forth that plaintiff’s claim had, prior to the filing of petition, been duly and regularly presented to the State Highway Commission, and was by said Commission regularly disallowed; that subsequent thereto said claim was regularly submitted to the State Highway Commission and the Attorney General at the request of plaintiff, that upon the request of counsel for the board of arbitrators, the claim was amended, and thereafter a demurrer to the claim was filed on behalf of the Highway Commission, and after consideration thereon, the board of arbitrators sustained said demurrer and thereby made their award against said claim, and alleged that said finding and award is final and is res judicata. Further, the return contained the following:

“If it be held that these defendants and their predecessors in office have refused to act as arbitrators and that there has been no arbitration as contended by the plaintiff, then these defendants say: ‘(1st) That the refusal of the arbitrators to act has operated as a revocation of the submission; (2d) that the statute of limitation has run on plaintiff’s demand; and (3rd) it is not made to appear that any dispute has arisen pertaining to the contracts or either of them or any part thereof’.”

Upon final trial it was the view of the trial judge, as expressed in the record, that plaintiff was entitled to relief, but that none could be granted in this action, because the exact amount due plaintiff had not been theretofore fixed, either by express contract or by any action of the Highway Commission, and because the court could not in this action go into the details of the claim and the transaction therein referred to for the purpose of determining whether the details of the claim were true and correct, and fair and just in amount. The trial court, therefore, denied the relief sought, and the plaintiff appealed.

This, in its final analysis, is a suit to compel by mandamus the State Highway Commission of the state of Oklahoma to allow plaintiff’s claim in a specific amount, or in the alternative to compel an audit or arbitration of the claim. Plaintiff’s claim on its face is clearly based upon the contention that the items therein flow from and are contained within the provisions of two certain contracts theretofore entered into between plaintiff and the State Highway Commission for the construction of certain highways in Washington county; the facts upon which these contentions are based are clearly matters which should be determined by an audit. Plaintiff contends that by reason of the fact that the defendants reached a legal conclusion that the claim is not payable under the law, and further that in the hearing had hereon in the lower court plaintiff introduced evidence as to the correctness of the claim and the amount thereof, which was not denied by the defendants, and that defendants *290 have through the entire matter proceeded solely upon the theory that the claim, regardless of the details as to amount, etc., was not payable under the law, that such procedure on the part of the defendants is an admission of the correctness of the claim. We find the record substantially in accord with this contention, and the result as contended would probably be true if the controversy were between private parties who were not commanded by statute to proceed in accordance with some statutory provision to audit all claims. But the Legislature of this state in guarding the expenditure of highway funds has provided that the Highway Commission may not allow any claim until same has been audited by the Commission. By the terms of this statute the Highway Commission is bound to audit all claims, and is not permitted to avoid this duty either by contract or by conduct which would in the absence of such statute constitute a waiver or admission. We do not mean to say that the Highway Commission, in the absence of fraud or collusion, cannot agree upon the correctness of a claim or the details thereof, because it is presumed in that instance that they have performed their official and statutory duty, but here that presumption will not be indulged, as the record shows otherwise. From the entire record we reach the conclusion that the claim has never in fact been audited within the intention and meaning of the law, but was disallowed upon the theory and conclusion reached without an audit that the Highway Commission had no authority of law to pay the same. Whether or not there is authority of law to pay the same, or any part thereof, is a question of law, and a conclusion reached thereon may be examined by the court after an audit which discloses the pertinent facts.

Section 1& of chapter 48, Session Laws 1923-24 [O. S. 1931, sec. 10106], provides:

“The expenditure of the state highway construction and maintenance fund shall be under the control and supervision of the State Highway Commission, and all claims against this fund shall be paid on its itemized voucher forms, prepared by the State Highway Commission, and sworn to by the claimant, and all such claims, when duly signed and sworn to, shall be audited by the Commission, and upon final approval vouchers which are payable from the state highway fund, shall be forwarded to the Auditor of the state, who shall draw warrants therefor, and said warrants shall he paid by the State Treasurer from said highway construction and maintenance fund.”

The law provides that the Highway Commission may make contracts regarding the building and maintaining of highways, leaving the form thereof to the discretion of the Commission.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1933 OK 521, 25 P.2d 783, 165 Okla. 288, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-boots-const-co-v-state-highway-commission-okla-1933.