Jackson v. McHargue

106 S.W. 871, 139 Ky. 739, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 2
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 9, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 106 S.W. 871 (Jackson v. McHargue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. McHargue, 106 S.W. 871, 139 Ky. 739, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 2 (Ky. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

[740]*740Opinion op the Court by

Judge Barker

-Reversing.

London, the county seat of Laurel county, is a city of the sixth class. Jarvis L. Jackson and Mayme F. Jackson (the latter being an infant) are the owners of a lot of land in London fronting on Main street. In this property the mother of the infants, Maggie E. Dyche, owns a dower interest, and her second husband, Á. R. Dyche, is the guardian of his step-daughter, The board of trustees of the town of London duly and legally passed an ordinance for the improvement of Main street by making a flagstone sidewalk five feet in width in front oil the property owned by the appellants. This ordinance is numbered 104. Afterwards, ordinance No. 104 was amended by ordinance No. 112; the amendment being to strike out the words “not exceeding a square.” With this exception ordinance No. 112 is in all respects the same as ordinance No. 104. By the terms of the ordinance it is provided:

“That if the owners of said property in said square and along said street, fronting mid abutting on Main street as aforesaid, shall fail f-.r thirty days after the passage and publication of tins ordinance to enter upon the construction of said walk in good faith, it shall be the duty of the street supervisor to advertise by notice printed in a newspaper published in said town, that on a day to be nan e 1 in said notice, at least ten days from the publication of said notice and up to one o’clock p. m. on the day named, sealed bids will be received by the street supervisor for the construction of the aforesaid sidewalk according to plans above set forth.”

After the passage of this ordinance, the appellants, through A. R. Dyche, contracted with J. N. Russell [741]*741to do the work in front of their property for the price of seventy-five cents per lineal foot; and in pursuance to this contract, Bussell proceeded with the work, placing a lot of stone upon the ground, and receiving an advance of thirty-three dollars from Dyche. Subsequently, Dyche became offended because the grade established by the city engineer was not satisfactory to him, and in some way not clearly explained in the record, Bussell abandoned the contract, hauled off his rock, and paid back to Dyche the money advanced by the latter. And this was all that Dyche ever did toward making the sidewalk. After the expiration of the thirty days the city authorities advertised the work to be let to the lowest and best bidder; whereupon J. N. Bussell made a bid for the contract at the price of one dollar per lineal foot; and this being the lowest and best bid, was accepted, and a contract made with Bussell by the city authorities. Bussell proceeded with the work under the new contract, and completed the sidewalk, which was received and accepted by the board of trustees, and thereupon a warrant was issued to the contractor for the sum of six hundred and fifty-nine dollars, it having been ascertained that the appellants owned six hundred and fifty-nine feet fronting on the improvement. This warrant the contractor, Bussell, sold to Mrs. Millie Mcliargue, who instituted this action against the appellants to recover of them the contract price due for the construction of the sidewalk. The petition states in detail all of the necessary steps taken in the matter leading up to the liability of the defendants, and without reciting these with particularity, we deem it sufficient to say that it states a good cause of action for a recovery upon the apportionment warrant. The answer of the defendants [742]*742presented several defenses: They denied that the sidewalk was completed in accordance with the contract and the ordinance, or that they owned six hundred and fifty-nine feet, or more than six hundred and twenty-seven feet fronting on the improvement; also that J. N. Russell sold or transferred his right, title to or interest in the apportionment warrant to Mrs. Millie Mcliargue. They then pleaded affirmatively that Main street was not a part of the highway belonging to the city of London, but that it was a part of the old wilderness road_ belonging to the. county, and that the city had no right to improve it as a highway. They also pleaded the fact that they, as owners, had entered into a contract with J. N. Russell to make the sidewalk, and that they had not been given a reasonable time in which to complete the work, and that the city was without right or power to advertise for bidders after they, as owners, had undertaken to improve the property themselves; that under their contract with J. N. Russell he had obligated himself to construct the sidewalk in accordance with the terms of the ordinance at the price of seventy-five cents per lineal foot; and they alleged that the subsequent attempt to amend ordinance No. 104 by ordinance No. 112, the advertising for bids on the work, and the letting of the same to J. N. Russell at one dollar per lineal foot, was a corrupt scheme enacted for the purpose of defrauding them. They further alleged that Lee B. Mcliargue was a member of the board of trustees of the city of London, which enacted the ordinance under which the work was done; that he was really the contractor, and Russell was merely his instrument and agent for the purpose of performing a contract which he, as trustee of the city, could not legally perform, and that [743]*743the sale of the apportionment warrant to Mrs. Millie McHargne was a part and parcel of the fraudulent scheme of her husband, Lee- B. McHargue, in securing the benefits of a contract which he, as a trustee of the city, could not himself complete. The defendants also set up the facts herein recited as to the attempt on their part to construct the sidewalk at the price of seventy-five cents per lineal foot, and the fact that the city had wrongfully let the work under the amended ordinance at one dollar per lineal foot to J. N. Russell; and this they pleaded as a counterclaim against the city, praying that, if the court should reach the conclusion that they were bound under the apportionment warrant to the assignee of the contractor for one dollar per lineal foot, they should be awarded a judgment on their counterclaim against the city for the twenty-five cents per lineal foot which they would be forced to pay by reason of the wrongful acts of the city authorities.

After the issues were completed by appropriate pleading, and the evidence taken, the case was submitted to the chancellor for final adjudication. The chancellor found, as a matter of fact, that the appellants owned only six hundred and forty-six feet of ground fronting on the improvement, and awarded Mrs. Millie McHargue, the assignee of the contractor, a personal judgment against them for six hundred and forty-six dollars, with interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum from the 12th day of March, 1904, until paid-; and to secure the payment of this, it was held'that the assignee'had a lien on the property of the defendants fronting on the improvement, which was enforced in the judgment; he also held that the work was not constructed in accordance with the contract and ordinance, and was.really worth only [744]*744seventy-five cents per lineal foot, and lie, therefore, awarded the 'defendants a judgment over on their counterclaim against the city of London for the twenty-five cents per lineal foot in excess of the real value of the contract work which they were required to pay by the negligence of the city in failing to supervise the work properly. This counterclaim amounted to one-hundred and sixty-one dollars and fifty cents. From this judgment the original defendants are here on appeal.

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Related

Town of Russell v. Whitt
170 S.W. 609 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1914)
Chesapeake & Ohio R. R. v. Brown
153 S.W. 753 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W. 871, 139 Ky. 739, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-mchargue-kyctapp-1908.