Lovell v. City of Altus

1925 OK 704, 246 P. 468, 118 Okla. 106, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 648
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 15, 1925
Docket15472
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1925 OK 704 (Lovell v. City of Altus) 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
Lovell v. City of Altus, 1925 OK 704, 246 P. 468, 118 Okla. 106, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 648 (Okla. 1925).

Opinions

Opinion by

FOSTER, C.

This was an action originally instituted in the district court of Jackson county by the. city of Al-tus, and involved a controversy between said city and the City National Bank, of Altus over the ownership of a cashier’s check which one W. D. Lovell had indorsed with directions to pay the proceeds thereof to the city of Altus, in the event he should fail to enter into a contract with the city of Altus, according to Ins proposal, for the construction of certain extensions and -improvements which the city of Altus desired to make on its waterworks system.

At the time the suit was originally filed by the city -of Altus against the City National Bank, W. D. Lovell was, and still is a .resident of the state of Minnesota. The bank appeared and filed a disclaimer, disclaiming any interest in the proceeds of said check but -alleging that W. D. Lovell had stepped payment thereon and prayed that Lovell be impleaded in the action. Lov-ell thereupon appeared and set up title to the proceeds of the check, claiming, among other things, that his bid having been accepted by the city of Altus under a mutual mistake of fact, he was entited to have his bid rescinded.

The cause was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury, which .rendered a general judgment in favor of the city of Altus for the amount represented by said cashier’s cheek, and denying and refusing the claim of Lovell thereto. Motion for a new trial was filed by the defendant Lovell, heard and- overruled, and the matter comes on regularly to be heard in this court on appeal by the defendant Lovell. '

Two specifications of error are relied on by the plaintiff in error for ,ai reversal of the case, which are as follows: First, the decision and judgment of the court is contrary to the law and evidence; second, the eou,rt erred in sustaining the demurrer of the plaintiff to the sixth and- eighth paragraphs of the amended answer cf the.defendant Lovell.

Under these two specifications of error several propositions of law are discussed by the .plaintiff -in error in his brief, but in our ¡view of the case the one controlling question is whether the trial court was.supporc-' ed .by the law and the evidence in finding’ that the plaintiff in error was not entitled to rescind his bid and recover his deposit.

It is true that the action as originally filed by the defendant in error, city of Altus, sounded in general damages but the trial court very pro-pe,rly held, we think, that the amount of the cashier’s check was in the nature of liquidated damages, thus limiting the amount to be recovered by the defendant in error, in the event it was entitled to recover anything, to the amount of said checjk, and the trial court disposed of the controversy, upon a consideration of the equitable' claim of .right in. plaintiff in error to rescind his bid and recover the deposit on the ground of a. mutual mistake of the parties. No appeal has been taken by the defendant in error, city of Altus, from thel adverse ruling of the trial court against it, in connection with its asserted right to recover general damages. Therefore, the only question before this court for review is whether the trial court, under the law and the evidence in the case, erred in disallowing the equitable defense interposed by the plaintiff in error of mutual mistake of the parties by which it is asserted that plaintiff in error had the right to rescind his bid.

The city of Altus adopted plans and specifications for .an extension of its waterworks system and filed them with the city el'erk of said city. Prospective bidders were required to make out their bids on special Wanks furnished by the engineer of the city. In the special proposal blanks there was a provision that the bidder had satisfied himself as to the amount .and character of the work and material necessary to complete the job according, to plans, specifications, and contract adopted by the city of Altus on the second day of April, 1919, on file in the office of the city clerk.

The plaintiff -in error, desiring to bid on the proposed improvement, sent his agent to the city of Altus to look over the ground with a view to. making a bid. While there he called at the office of the city clerk to inspect the plans and specifications, presumably on file in that office, but was told that the same had been lost or mislaid and the clerk directed him to apply to the Ben-ham Engineering -Obmpany; at Oklahoma Oity for a copy of the plans and speeifiea-. tions, and gave the agent a letter request-; ing the Benham Engineering Company to furnish him a copy thereof. The ^Benham Engineering Company were agents of the [108]*108city of Altus. The plaintiff in error’s .agent thereupon went to Oklahoma City and received what purported to be a copy of the plans and specifications on.file in the office of the city clerk, returned from Oklahoma City the next day, computed his -bid. attached the copy of the plans and specifications received frcm the engineering company thereto, and filed the same with the city clerk.

On the 21st day of April, 1919, the bids were opened at a meeting of the city council of Altus and the plaintiff in error appearing to be the lowest and best bidder, the contract was awarded to him upon his bid of $84,813.50. He thereupon returned to Oklahoma City, accompanied by a representative of the engineering company, for the purpose of executing a contract. In Oklahoma City, when the contract was tendered to him, plaintiff in error's .agent discovered that the purported copy of the plans and specifications which had theretofore been .furnished him were tb,ree sheets short, and that he had placed his bid upon these short specifications.

He declined to enter into a contract containing the requirements called for in the three missing sheets, notifying the plaintiff in error in Minnesota, who later and after unsuccessful effort to reach some satisfactory agreement with the city council rescinded his bid and demanded the return of the $5,000.

The unsuccessful negotiations referred1 to above consisted in the acceptance by the city council of a report of the engineering company allowing the plaintiff in error a raise of something in excess of $5,000 in his bid to take care of the requirements called fo,r in the three missing sheets, the forwarding of this report to the plaintiff in error in Minnesota, letters by the mayor and city attorney of Altus to the plaintiff in error dealing with the discrepancies in the plans and specifications, the proceedings of certain meetings of the city council h.ad during these negotiations, and the .reply of the plaintiff, in error declining the proposition as submitted.

It was the opinion of the trial court, in certain oral statements made by him during the trial, that the .plaintiff in error made his bid on the short plans furnished him by defendant in error’s agent, Benham Engineering Company, as appears from the following remark:

“There seems to be no controversy but what the court would find that the plans presented by the Benham Engineering Company were short and that the - defendant, Lovell, then made his bid on the short plans that I mentioned, if I m.ay designate it as such.”

It appears that the th.ree missing sheets in the specifications, for the most part, had to do with the mixture of cement, sand, and gravel to be used in the general concrete work, and with a general requirement that the contractor use a waterproofing material the.reon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 704, 246 P. 468, 118 Okla. 106, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovell-v-city-of-altus-okla-1925.