McCloud & Geigle v. City of Columbus

54 Ohio St. (N.S.) 439
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 54 Ohio St. (N.S.) 439 (McCloud & Geigle v. City of Columbus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCloud & Geigle v. City of Columbus, 54 Ohio St. (N.S.) 439 (Ohio 1896).

Opinion

Bradbury, J.

The circuit court held the contract, by virtue of which plaintiffs sought to recover, tobe void, for the sole reason that the proposition for bids, for making the improvement was not advertised as prescribed by section 2303, Revised Statutes.

The scheme of improvement contemplated an assessment against the property abutting thereon to pay the expense of making it. The record discloses the adoption, of the preliminary resolution declaring a necessity for the improvement and specifying its nature, or character, and the subsequent enactment of an ordinance providing therefor ; that a notice calling for bids to make the im- • provements was published; that the plaintiffs in error were the lowest responsible bidders therefor; that the plaintiffs in error and the city of Columbus entered into a contract, based upon the bid of 'the former, by the terms of which they were to [449]*449perform all the labor and. furnish all the material necessary to complete the improvement, and to receive therefor $8,563.36. That they had fully performed the contract on ■ their part. The terms of the contract were such that the city was not to be liable thereon to the plaintiffs in error until after the latter had exhausted their remedies against the owners of the property that abutted upon the improvements, and then only for the balance that remain uncollected. After the improvements had been substantially completed and the proportion of the entire cost that should be assessed against each parcel of abutting property, ascertained, a large number, if not all, of the abutting proprietors brought an action against the citv of Columbus and the plaintiffs in error to enjoin the city from placing the assessments upon their respective lots. This action was taken to the circuit court on appeal. The trial in the circuit court resulted in a finding that the assessments were irregular; the court proceeding under section 2289, Revised Statutes, then ascertained the actual cost of the labor and material that went into the improvement apportioned the same among the abutting owners, and charged the share of each owner upon his lot.

The contractors, plaintiffs in error, were thus reimbursed for whatever they had expended in and about the improvement. The difference between this expenditure and the contract price, representing the profits of the transaction, was about two thousand and three hundred dollars, and the object of the present action is to recover that sum from the city.

The improvement in question was local; it was inaugurated and carried onward to completion upon [450]*450the supposition that the benefit to result from, it to abutting property was at least equal to the sum it would cost, and that sum was to be apportioned among the owners of that property and made a charge thereon. This was the primary source from which payment was to be drawn. The city was not to be called upon for payment of any part thus to be charged upon abutting property- until after this primary source had been exhausted, and then only for so much thereof as could not be recovered from that source. Under thése conditions the city of Columbus was under no higher obligation than that of the guarantor.

The owners of the abutting property were relieved of any obligation to pay the contractors, plaintiffs in error, any sums excepting the actual cost of the improvement, because of the omission of the city council to cause the notice to bidders to be advertised according to the requirements of section 2303, Revised Statutes. That section requires -such notice to be published for four weeks in two newspapers published and of general circulation in the city, where the estimated cost of the improvement exceeds five thousand dollars. The estimated cost of the improvements in this cause exceeded that sum. A notice calling for bids was published, but the mode or length of time does not definitely appear, the record merely showing that it was for less than the statutory period. The duty of publication belongs to the city council. In omitting to ;make it in the manner prescribed by the statute the city council violated that duty. Who is to suffer for this default? Ordinarily a principal is answerable for a default of his agent in the line of the agent’s duty. If, however, that general principle should be invoked as [451]*451the sole arbiter of the question, much difficulty might arise in its application. Doubtless the council of a municipal corporation is generally its agent, but that the legislature might impose duties upon that body other than those pertaining to the entire municipality is conceivable. Municipal corporations are agencies of the state in the administration of its governmental affairs, and might be authorized to charge the state itself with pecuniary obligations. That it may impose obligations upon distinct portion of its inhabitants, in connection with local improvement, is shown by its frequently acting in such matters, as expressly authorized by statute. Ih such cases, no principle is ■apparent which makes that body, while acting in the local affair, the agent of the whole body of the people, instead of that portion upon whose immediate affairs the council is acting, so as to cast upon the entire body of taxpayers the burden of mistakes made in transacting the concerns of a part only. It would seem that such consequences should result, and the whole body of the inhabitants charged with liability under such circumstances, only by virtue of some oositive provisions of law.

In the present case the city of Columbus entered into a contract to pay for any balance not collectable from the abutting proprietors, and thereafter if the contract was valid it was bound to perform what the statutes required it to do to charge those abutting proprietors, and therefor if by reason of an omission of anything it was subsequently required to do, those abutting proprietors, who, as we have seen, were primarily liable, were discharged, the city should make good the loss. The question, however, is, was the contract in this ease valid? The duty which the council omitted was [452]*452one which preceded the making of the contract, and was preliminary thereto. The notice which it omitted to publish in the prescribed manner and for the prescribed time was provided by the legislature as a safeguard to the taxpayer, whether local or general, against private rapacity and official indifference. This beneficial provision has no value if it can be disregarded by a city council, and yet a contract entered into binding upon the city and consequently imposing a burden upon the whole body of its taxpayers. The evils that imperatively demand these restrictive statutes are of common notoriety. They can be held in check only by regarding as mandatory statutory provisions designed to circumvent them.

There are no equitable considerations that require the whole body of the taxpayers of the city to contribute to a fund to pay the plaintiffs in error. The latter, as we have seen, have been reimbursed for their expenditures made' in behalf of the improvements. They are now seeking the profits of the transaction, which, if paid by the city must be from funds raised chiefly by those who were not appreciably benefited by the work done and materials furnished. The plaintiffs in error, therefore, must recover, if at all, not upon-any equitable g’rounds, but upon a strict legal right.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Ohio St. (N.S.) 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccloud-geigle-v-city-of-columbus-ohio-1896.