Mottin v. Board of County Commissioners

133 P. 165, 89 Kan. 742, 1913 Kan. LEXIS 114
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 7, 1913
DocketNo. 17,993
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 133 P. 165 (Mottin v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mottin v. Board of County Commissioners, 133 P. 165, 89 Kan. 742, 1913 Kan. LEXIS 114 (kan 1913).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Benson, J.:

The question to be decided arises upon a demurrer to evidence. The plaintiff sued upon claims for repairing bridges. The plaintiff’s evidence .tended to prove the following facts: The board of county commissioners had appointed M. C. Kennedy, one of its members, a committee on roads, bridges and poor for the first commissioner district, and J. Bleakley, another member, a like committee for the third district. These committee appointments were entered on the journal of the board. A deputy county surveyor, who is a civil engineer of twenty-five years’ experience, was directed by the board to make estimates on bridge work when repairs were contemplated, inspect the work after it was done, and report to the board. He is referred to in the testimony of members of the board as the engineer. In general he performed the duties just referred to. When there was a complaint or report that repairs were needed upon a bridge, the deputy surveyor — who for brevity will be referred to as the surveyor — was directed either by the board, or the commissioner acting as a committee in the district where the bridge was located, to make an estimate of the cost. In some cases members of the board accompanied the surveyor. Estimates were made accordingly, and when the repairs could be made for less than $100, a contract was let, Upon proceedings of this character repairs were made by the plaintiff upon many bridges in the year 1908, for which over fifty bills were presented to the board ranging from $12 to $99 in amount. About one-half [744]*744of the bills were presented in November, 1908, and the others about two years later. One of the bills was in the. following form:

“August 27th, 1908.
The County of Leavenworth,
To J. F. Mottin, Dr.
Repair to Bridge No. 260 per estimate .... $99.00. O. K. — H. A. PERKINS,
Deputy Surveyor.”

A proper verification was added, and the following estimate was attached:

“Leavenworth, Kansas, June 18, 1908.
To the Honorable Board of County Commissioners of Leavenworth County, Kansas.
Gentlemen :
.1 hand you herewith estimate of repairs on Bridge No. 260, over Mud Creek, Reno Township.
12 pcs. 2x12x14,
8 pcs. 3 x 12 x 16,
2 pcs. 8 x 8 x 16,
6 piles 16 in.,
Repair to Hand Rail,.$99.00.
H. A. Perkins, Dep. Co. Sur.”

The other bills were in the same form, with like verification, and estimates were attached with similar specifications. These estimates were attached to the bills filed in the year 1908 by order of the board after they had been filed. Estimates upon the bills filed in 1910 were attached before filing. The plaintiff testified that all the work was done in the year 1908, and that the bills withheld until the later date were not filed earlier because the board requested him to delay presentation. All were presented within the statutory period of limitation. The estimates made by the surveyor were entered in a book kept for that purpose, kept in'his-office which was destroyed in a fire which burned the court house.

The usual procedure in making repairs appears from the following quotations from testimony:

(Kennedy.) “If a bridge was reported to me to be dangerous and needed repair I reported it to the board. Before doing that I would take a ride over in the neighborhood where the bridges were, and I reported them to [745]*745the board then and would be instructed to go to work and have them fixed, notifying the engineer to make an estimate under the limit. The limit was $100. We advertised for the lowest bidder.
“Q. I will ask you to state if you ever took these matters before the board as a board. A. I think on three occasions.
“Q. State what you said to the board at that time. A. I believed that the bills were due and knew they were never paid, and I asked that the bills be paid, and I made a motion twice to that effect.
“Q. Did the board as a board have' knowledge of this work? A. The major portion of it did. Mr. Bleakley used to be absent on account of sickness. Mr. Short and myself discussed these matters at these meetings. We made it a rule that on amounts over $100 must be advertised and let to the lowest bidder. So our contract price was always under $99 for any work that was done that was not advertised and let to the lowest bidder. We would have the engineer go out and make an estimate. It would be impossible to tell how much grading and material was needed. Then we would instruct him to see some bridge man or see them ourselves and tell them to do the work and not to exceed that amount. If at times he did n’t use all the material that was 'on the list there was a deduction, and the engineer had authority to allow more material up to $100, but not more. ...
“Q. Was there any objection made that these bills were not itemized sufficiently? A. I believe on one or two occasions there was something wrong, perhaps they were not signed up properly and he would draw our attention to it and we would have them rectified. ...
“We referred to the deputy surveyor as the engineer —we would give him instructions after the work was brought before us — we would quite often give him instructions to have this work done. -The parties that were interested in the bridges notified us that the bridges needed repairing; they would come in and notify us regarding bridges being dangerous and out of repair, and we would instruct the deputy surveyor or county surveyor to go out and make an estimate of the work and report to us. I will not say that this was done in each instance. At times we would tell him to [746]*746have the work done and at other times we would instruct somebody else after looking at the estimate. One of those courses was pursued in all bridge work. . . .
“Q. I will ask you to state whether or not the work that is indicated in these bills was authorized by the board iri the manner above indicated? A. Yes, sir.”
(Bleakley.) “I would learn óf a bridge out of repair, ■ may be it would be on a rural route. Usually when we met as a board I made known to the board what I had heard, and the matter was referred back to me, being chairman of the committee, unless there was some objection. I don’t recall any time when objection was made. That course was pursued in relation to those bills in controversy. I was advised of and knew of the work represented by these claims in my district. That work was formally discussed by the board at regular meetings in my presence. The first steps that were taken were taken at a meeting. The full board was present. I suppose these specific bridges in controversy here were among the bridges discussed. . . . The matter was up before us on several occasions, because I didn’t know whether to go ahead or stop, but they were clamoring 'for bridges — some bridges had been down the year previous, which was very annoying to the farmers, and they wanted the board to repair them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 P. 165, 89 Kan. 742, 1913 Kan. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mottin-v-board-of-county-commissioners-kan-1913.