McCutcheon v. City of Shreveport

102 So. 875, 157 La. 699, 1925 La. LEXIS 1955
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 5, 1925
DocketNo. 26855.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 102 So. 875 (McCutcheon v. City of Shreveport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCutcheon v. City of Shreveport, 102 So. 875, 157 La. 699, 1925 La. LEXIS 1955 (La. 1925).

Opinions

LAND, J.

Plaintiff is the owner of a tract of land abutting on Fetzer avenue in the city of Shreveport, and seeks in the present proceeding to enjoin defendant city from awarding a contract to pave said avenue with “Warrenite-Bitulithic pavement,” under an ordinance of the city council ordering said paving and advertisement for bids.

As grounds for the issuance of the injunction prayed for, plaintiff contests the validity and sufficiency of the petition of the owners of property fronting on said avenue, and alleges that open, free, and fair competition in bidding is prevented as to independent contractors, under the license agreement filed with the city council by Warren Bros. Co. of Boston, Mass., under the resolution of said council adopting said license agreement, and under the -specifications for paving said avenue adopted by said council, and on file in the office of the city engineer.

Defendant city filed a plea of prescription of 30 days under Act 115 of 1922, as a bar against the attack made by plaintiff upon the validity and sufficiency of the petition of the property owners. This plea was sustained by the trial judge, evidence was taken on the other grounds of the rule nisi to determine whether or not the injunction should issue, and the injunction applied for was refused. Plaintiff has appealed.

Plea of Prescription.

1. It is provided in section 2 of Act 115 of 1922 that:

*701 “Notice of the filing of a petition for an improvement under the provisions of this act shall be given by the clerk or engineer of the municipality by publication in the official journal * * * and after thirty days from the date of such publication * * * all persons shall be barred from contesting the validity or sufficiency of the petition for improvement or interfering with the progress of the improvement as herein provided.”

A formal protest against the validity and sufficiency of the petition of the property owners was made by plaintiff before the city council on the 29th day after the publication of the-filing of the petition, and was, therefore, presented timely.

It is true that plaintiff’s suit was not filed in the district court of Caddo parish within the 30-day limit prescribed by Act 115 of 1922 for contesting the validity or -sufficiency of the petition of the property owners. The “contesting,” however, required by said act does not, in our opinion, relate to suits to be instituted, in a stale court of competent jurisdiction, but only to protests before the city council, to be made by an adverse property owner, against the validity or sufficiency of the petition of the property owners requesting the paving to be ordered. No jurisdiction is conferred by said act upon any state court to try and decide this contest in the first instance. The notice of 30 days is by publication, and not by citation as in a formal suit, and its clear purpose is to ' summon property owners before the council to urge any objection which they may have to the validity or sufficiency of the petition on file, and to debar them, as to such objections, from interfering thereafter with the progress of the improvement ■by suit in a state court, unless the protest has been made within the statutory limitation. Act 115 of 1922 is intended by the Legislature as a statute of repose, and evidently has been enacted in the exercise of a wise public policy. However, under the view which we have taken as to the merits of this case, it does not become necessary for us to pass upon the issue of validity or sufficiency of the petition filed by the property owners.

On the Merits.

2. The license agreement filed with the city council of the city of Shreveport by Warren Bros. Co. of Boston, Mass., reads, in part, as follows:

“Inasmuch as it is desired by your municipality to receive bids for the improvement of streets herein with the Warrenite-Bitulithic pavement, and inasmuch as the said pavement is covered by letters patent issued by the United States and owned by Warren Bros. Co., which patents have not expired, and which patents cover only the wearing surface of said pavement, and the method and process of constructing the same, and in order that there may be competitive bidding for furnishing and constructing said pavement, on which it is desired to receive bids, and enter into a contract to construct any public improvement in which said patented pavement and construction may enter, or become a part of said improvement.”
“Now, therefore, if the city of Shreveport shall adopt specifications requiring the construction of Warrenite-Bitulithic pavement, and advertise for bids for said construction, Warren Bros. Oo. hereby relinquishes and places at the disposal of said city, full rights to use all of the patents necessary for the construction and maintenance of said pavement, either for itself, or for any bidder, who is desirous of bidding on said pavement, and to whom a contract may be let for the construction thereof, for the sum of twenty-five cents ($.25) for each square yard of said pavement, laid by either the city itself, or by any contractor, in pursuance of any contract let as aforesaid.”

The letters patent referred to by Warren Bros. Oo. in said license agreement include a patent granted to Frederick John Warren May 5, 1903, and which expired May 4,1920; and also a patent issued to Edwin O. Wallace May 31, 1910, and which is still in force.

The Wallace patent covers “only the wearing surface of the pavement and the methods and processes of constructing the same,” as specified in said license agreement.

By resolution No. '27, the city council of the city of Shreveport approved and accept *703 ed the proposal of Warren Bros. Oo. of Boston, Mass., to permit any contractor or the city of Shreveport to use their patented process, known as Warrenite-Bitulithic pavement, on the payment of a royalty of 25 cents per square yard of pavement, which' license charge is to include, without extra cost, service and inspection of their laboratory department, examination of material, and a competent resident inspector of Shreveport when Warrenite-Bitulithic pavement surface is being laid.

The city engineer was authorized by said resolution “to post in his office copy of this license agreement, so that all and any contractors proposing to bid upon any street offered to be paved with Warrenite-Bitulithic pavement may have due notice of the same, and full authority and power to use said patented process on the payment of the sum of 25 cents per square yard, including extra service enumerated in said license agreement without further charge.”

Ordinance No. 87 of the city of Shreveport recites that the number legally required of the property owners whose property abuts' on Eetzer avenue, between Texas avenue and western city limits, had requested that said avenue be paved with Warrenite-Bitulithic pavement; and said ordinance ordered said avenue to be “paved with Warrenite-Bitulithic paving according to the plans and specifications for same, which are attached hereto and which are hereby adopted.”

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Bluebook (online)
102 So. 875, 157 La. 699, 1925 La. LEXIS 1955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccutcheon-v-city-of-shreveport-la-1925.