Kelley v. Town of Torrington

71 A. 939, 81 Conn. 615, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 128
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 16, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 71 A. 939 (Kelley v. Town of Torrington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelley v. Town of Torrington, 71 A. 939, 81 Conn. 615, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 128 (Colo. 1909).

Opinion

Thayer, J.

The plaintiff brought his action against William Mella & Company and recovered judgment against them. Claiming to have secured, by process of foreign attachment inserted in his writ, a debt due to that firm from *617 the town of Torrington, he now seeks, on scire facias, to obtain a judgment against the town for the amount of his judgment against the original defendant. The question at issue between the parties upon the trial was whether, at the time suit was brought against Mella & Company, July 19th, 1906, any debt was due to that firm from the town. In the trial court a verdict was directed for the defendant. The plaintiff claims that this was error and that he is entitled to a new trial because thereof.

To entitle him to a new trial the record must disclose that there was evidence from which the jury would have been warranted in finding proven every fact essential to the plaintiff's recovery, and also disclose no proved or undisputed fact which would prevent his recovery.

He claimed to have proved that at the time the town was factorized it was indebted to Mella & Company for work performed in grading and improving one of its highways known as the Daytonville road. At a former trial of the case he claimed that this work was done at the request and by direction of the defendant's selectmen, no price being fixed for the same, and that the town was bound to pay therefor what the work was reasonably worth. Kelley v. Torrington, 80 Conn. 378, 68 Atl. 855. Upon the present trial he claimed that the work was done under a written contract made with the town pursuant to the Good Roads Act (Public Acts of 1905, p. 432, Chap. 232); that the work was entered upon on May 21st, 1906, and continued until July 6th following, when the firm's workmen struck and the work was abandoned; that Mella & Company were obliged to abandon the work because they were unable to procure any money from the town with which to pay their men, and because they were required to change, straighten and lower the grade of the road-bed, and safeguard the tracks of a street railway which was located upon the highway which was being improved. .His claim is that these requirements, and the town's refusal to pay, were wrong *618 ful, and prevented the firm from completing the contract and justified their abandonment of it and treating it as rescinded; that they were therefore entitled to compensation for the work actually performed, and that, if not, they were entitled to compensation for the extra work claimed to have been done in safeguarding, straightening and lowering the grade of the railway tracks.

If the plaintiff failed to perform his contract he could .not recover under it, but if there was a contract which the defendant wrongfully prevented him from completing, he could recover for the work done. Connelly v. Devoe, 37 Conn. 570, 576; Valente v. Weinberg, 80 id. 134, 135, 67 Atl. 369. The defendant claims that no such contract was proved. The statute (Public Acts of 1905, p. 432, Chap. 232) requires that the improvement of highways therein provided for, except in cases where the cost will not exceed 81,000, shall be submitted to competition; that it shall be let to the lowest bidder; that the work shall be done under a written agreement by the contractor to do it in accordance with plans and specifications prepared under the direction of the State highway commissioner; that such agreement shall be signed by the contractor, the selectmen of the town, and said highway commissioner, and a copy thereof filed with the latter; and that the contractor shall give a bond conditioned for the faithful performance of the work in accordance with the plans and specifications and the terms of the contract. These requirements are for the protection of the State, which pays the larger part of the cost of the improvements. Griswold v. Guilford, 75 Conn. 192, 195, 52 Atl. 742; Kelley v. Torrington, 80 Conn. 378, 382, 68 Atl. 855. It is important to the State that these requirements of the statute be strictly complied with. These improvements are being made in all parts of the State. The contracts on file with the highway commissioner are evidence at hand as to the cost of the work and the terms upon which it is to be performed. They prevent *619 any arrangement between the contractors and the officers of the town detrimental to the interests of the State. And the bond, in case the contractor fails to complete his contract, secures the State from loss such as was incurred in the present case if the contractor fails to perform his contract. While the towns nominally make the improvements, their powers and the powers of their officers are prescribed and limited by the statute. Their selectmen have no power to expend for other purposes the money appropriated by the town and State for these improvements, and they have no power to waive any of the requirements of the statute which safeguard the interests of the State and the taxpayers.

Upon the trial the following facts were proved and not disputed: The defendant appropriated $9,000 to improve its highways under the statute in question. The Dayton-ville road was duly selected as one of its roads to be improved. Calls for bids were duly advertised and Mella & Company were bidders, and the lowest bidders, for the contract. The contract was awarded to them. Supposing that they would be able to furnish the required bond, they at once entered upon the work without having executed either the contract or bond required by the statute. One of the partners shortly after retired from the firm, and the others were unable to procure a bond. The defendant would provide them with no money with which to pay their help, the help struck because they were not paid, and the firm abandoned the work. No contract was ever executed by the firm, the selectmen and the highway commissioner, and no bond was ever given. It was, however, claimed by the plaintiff, but disputed, that the selectmen waived the giving of the bond, and that Mella & Company signed and tendered to the selectmen a contract such as the statute requires, which had been prepared by the highway commissioner when the contract was awarded. He claims that these disputed questions should have been sub *620 mitted to the jury. As already stated, the selectmen had no power to waive the giving of the bond, and they were not required to sign the contract, if tendered, unless it was accompanied with the bond. The bond was required as security for the faithful performance of the contract by the contractor, and the selectmen could not be asked to bind the town to the terms of the contract until the contractors also were bound. There was nothing in these claims which could properly have been submitted to the jury.

The record thus shows that there was an entire absence of evidence to go to the jury to sustain the plaintiff's claim that there was a contract between the town and Mella & Company. The contract not being proved, the jury could not be asked to find that anything was due from the town to Mella & Company under it, or for a breach of it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 A. 939, 81 Conn. 615, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelley-v-town-of-torrington-conn-1909.