Griffin v. Salt Lake City

55 P. 383, 18 Utah 132, 1898 Utah LEXIS 106
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 55 P. 383 (Griffin v. Salt Lake City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffin v. Salt Lake City, 55 P. 383, 18 Utah 132, 1898 Utah LEXIS 106 (Utah 1898).

Opinion

MINER, J.

By direction of the respondent, Salt Lake City, its street committee caused to be published the following notice for bids for sprinkling streets in Salt Lake City:

‘ ‘ Proposals for Street Sprinkling. The sprinkling committee of the city of Salt Lake, will receive bids for sprinkling the streets of Salt Lake until Monday, May 18, 1896, as follows: separate bids must be returned for one, two and J three years’ contracts:

“Bids will be for sprinkling districts one, two, three and five, as shown on the plat in the office of the city engineer, and must also give a pric eper week per block for such extra sprinkling as the City Council may hereafter determine on.”

■ The plaintiff Griffin, in response to this notice, made the following bid:

“Salt Lake City, Utah, May 18, 1896.

“E. M. LeProhon, chairman, street sprinkling com-| mittee. I

“Dear Sir: — I beg to offer the following bid for street sprinkling, as per your advertisement hereto attached:

“I'will sprinkle districts 1, 2, 3 and 5, viz.:

“One year contract, $1,775.00 per month.

“ Two years’ contract, $1,625.00 per month.

“Three years’-contract, $1,450.00 per month.

“All other blocks that may be sprinkled to be at'“$2.45 per block per week, for time actually sprinkled, if regular size; others proportionately the same. This last to apply in case either proposition is accepted. Find certified check, favor J. L. May, city treasurer, as required. I have everything in readiness to cover those districts af once, if either proposition is accepted.

“Respectfully submitted,

“J. H. Griffin.” 1

[135]*135On May 26, 1896, this with other bids previously received were opened at a meeting of the city council and referred to a committee consisting of the whole council, who reported in favor of. accepting the plaintiff’s bid, as follows:

“reports of select committees.

‘We, your committee of the whole, beg leave to report as follows in the matter of the bids of J. H. Griffin, Frank Harrigan and B. F. Be dm on, for sprinkling the streets of this city, which were referred to your committee at the last session of the council:

“Upon due consideration, we recommend that the bid of J. H. Griffin to sprinkle the streets of the city on a three years’ contract at fourteen hundred and fifty dollars ($1,450.00) per month be accepted, with the understanding that the said contract shall begin on the first day of June, 1896, and shall expire on the 31st day of December, 1898. Bespectfully submitted,

M. E. Mulvey, Chairman.”

This report was adopted by the city council. The draft of a contract for street sprinkling was submitted to the City Council at the same meeting and approved, and the mayor signed the contract on the part of the city, and the plaintiff signed it in the form as drafted by the city attorney, without consulting his own attorney, believing that the contract drawn embodied the contract as made.

The plaintiff in his complaint alleges that by mutual mistake of the parties a material stipulation of the terms agreed upon was omitted from the contract with reference to sprinkling outside districts. The clause in regard to sprinkling outside the districts 1, 2, 3, and 5, as it was drawn by the city attorney and now appears in the contract, reads ¿s follows:

[136]*136“And it is further mutually agreed by and between the parties hereto, that if at any 'time during the life of this agreement, said first party shall request it, said second party shall sprinkle any other streets within the limits of said city and not embarced within the sprinkling districts aforesaid, at the stipulated price of two dollars and forty-five cents per week per block, where the streets are 100 feet wide between the curbs; it being -understood and agreed between the parties hereto, that for the purposes of this contract, a block shall be taken to be 792 feet in length, that being the difference between the center of intersections in the regular sized blocks of said city, and if any larger or smaller blocks, or wider or narrower streets are required to be sprinkled under this clause of said contract, such larger or smaller areas shall be paid for in the same proportion as above stipulated, and for the number of weeks said second party is actually engaged in said extra sprinkling and not otherwise.”

The plaintiff contends that such contract, in order to express the agreement of the parties in that respect should read as follows:

“It is further mutually agreed by and between the parties hereto, that if at any time during the life of this agreement said first party shall determine to have the streets or walks within the limits of the city, and not embraced within the sprinkling contract aforesaid, sprinkled, the work of sprinkling the same shall be awarded to and shall be performed by the plaintiff at the stipulated price of $2.45 per week per block.”

The respondent claims that under the contraer, as drawn, the plaintiff, Griffin, was bound to do all the extra sprinkling the city might call upon him to do, yet the city was not bound to give him any of the extra sprinkling, but could give it to anyone as it chose. In other words, [137]*137that this part of the contract was unilateral; that Griffin was bound, but the city was not. Griffin did all the extra sprinkling for One year follpwing the execution of the contract, and was paid the stipulated price therefor without any question being made by the city as to the meaning of the contract. After the expiration of one year the city let the contract to other parties at a cheaper rate, over the objection of the plaintiff, and thereupon this complaint was filed to reform the contract.

It appears to us that the contract between Griffin and the city was evidenced by the printed advertisement for bids to sprinkle the streets named and such other extra sprinkling as might thereafter be required, the bid of Griffin, and the acceptance of such bid by the city. These three documents were in writing, and there is no claim that there was ever any modification of such writing. The city attorney was directed by the city to place the contract in proper form to conform to the agreement. The advertisement was for bids for sprinkling districts 1, 2, 3, and 5, as shown on the plat, and the person bidding was required to give the price per week per block for Such extra sprinkling as the city council might afterwards determine to have done, and separate bids were required for sprinkling on one, two, and three years’ contracts. At this time certain parts of the city were included in the four districts named. While other parts of the city were in no districts. Consequently under the advertisement bidders were required to cover the streets of the city outside of the four districts by their bids. The city evidently desired to keep within its own control the sprinkling of all outlying streets and blocks. It was therefore desirable to obtain the price per week for sprinkling each block, and the bidder was required to include the outlying streets as a part of his bid.

[138]*138In making his bid the appellant conformed to all the requirements of the printed advertisement. His bid was to sprinkle districts Nos.

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Bluebook (online)
55 P. 383, 18 Utah 132, 1898 Utah LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-salt-lake-city-utah-1898.