Murrie v. Harper

249 Ill. App. 586, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 97
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 16, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 249 Ill. App. 586 (Murrie v. Harper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murrie v. Harper, 249 Ill. App. 586, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 97 (Ill. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolfe

delivered the opinion of the court.

These causes, in which bills for injunctions were filed by complainants as taxpayers on behalf of themselves and all other taxpayers, come to this court on appeals from decrees of the circuit court of Massac county permanently restraining the city of Metropolis from paying any further sums' of money to appellant out of the general treasury of said city for engineering services rendered or to be rendered by appellant in certain local improvements mentioned in the decrees.

On August 24, 1925, the city of Metropolis entered into an agreement with the appellant in which it was agreed that appellant would furnish all necessary plans, specifications and estimates of cost and all engineering services for the construction and completion of certain proposed, and any other, local improvements that said city might authorize, for five per cent of the total cost of said improvements, two per cent of the estimated cost to be payable when the plans, specifications and estimates of cost were delivered, one per cent upon confirmation of the assessments, and the balance of two per cent to be paid as the work progressed ; and that in the event that said improvements should be abandoned before confirmation, said appellant should accept said initial payment of two per cent in full payment for his services.

Appellant thereafter prepared and delivered plans, specifications and estimates of cost in connection with an improvement designated as “ Paving District No. 1,” which were accepted and used by the board of local improvements in the preparation of a resolution recommending the making of the improvement and, after a public hearing upon said resolution, in the preparation of a final resolution passed by said board of local improvements resolving that said improvement as shown by said plans, specifications and estimates of cost be made and a draft of an ordinance for the construction of said improvements in accordance therewith was then prepared by said board, which ordinance together with said plans, specifications and estimates of cost were thereafter submitted to the city council with a recommendation that said ordinance be passed and the city council of said city thereafter passed said ordinance approving said plans, specifications and estimates of cost, being ordinance No. 701, section 3 of which ordinance provided that the whole cost of said improvement including the sum of $16,000, being the amount included in the estimate of the president; attached thereto, as court costs and necessary lawful expenses in such behalf, be paid for by special assessment.

On December 14, 1925, the city council authorized the borrowing of $5,000 with which to pay engineering fees, assessor, and clerk hire, and thereafter said sum was borrowed from the First National Bank of Metropolis, Illinois, for which a warrant was issued to said bank which did not on its face provide for its payment out of any particular fund. Out of said $5,000 said city paid $4,000 to appellant for engineering fees, leaving a balance due on the initial payment of two per cent of something over $3,000.

Thereafter said improvement ordinance No. 701 was repealed on recommendation of the board of local improvements and the improvements abandoned.

On May 24, 1926, said city and appellant entered into a new contract reciting that said prior improvement had been abandoned, and that a new district designated as “Paving Improvement No. 1” had been laid out and adopted by the board of local improvements and in which it was agreed that appellant should receive the balance due of $3,226.85 on account of the two per cent earned by him in said proceeding which had been abandoned, and three per cent of the cost of said new improvement designated as “Paving Improvement No. 1” (one per cent of said three per cent to be paid upon confirmation and the remaining two per cent upon completion and acceptance of the work), in full payment for his services in both of said improvements.

Subsequent to the making of said last-mentioned contract, appellant prepared the necessary plans, specifications and estimates of cost for the construction of said improvement designated as “Paving Improvement No. 1,” and thereafter, upon recommendation of said board of local improvements, the city council passed an ordinance, being ordinance No. 706, providing that the whole cost of said improvement, including the sum of $6,000 being the amount of the estimate the president of the board of local improvements thereto attached, as cost of making, levying and collecting the assessment and necessary lawful expenses, be paid for by such special assessment. Subsequently said ordinance No. 706 providing for said “Paving Improvement No. 1” was repealed on advice of the board of local improvements and said proposed improvement abandoned.

Thereafter appellant prepared the necessary plans, specifications and estimates of cost for another proposed improvement also designated as “Paving Improvement No. 1” and an ordinance, being ordinance No. 712, providing for said improvement, was thereafter duly passed by the city council on the recommendation of said board of local improvements, and afterward said ordinance No. 712 was repealed on the advice of the board of local improvements and said improvement abandoned.

Thereafter appellant prepared all necessary plans, specifications and estimates of cost for a new improvement designated, as was the first improvement, “Paving District No. 1” and an ordinance was duly passed by said city council on the recommendation of said board of local improvements, in accordance with said plans and specifications, and upon a petition being filed in circuit court of Massac county an order confirming said assessment was entered in said court on the same day that the decrees in these cause's were entered.

The fiscal year of the city of Metropolis begins on the 1st day of July of each year and the annual appropriation ordinance for the year commencing July 1, 1925, did not contain any definite item for engineering services, but did contain an item “For Streets, Alleys and Sidewalks — $20,000.00 ’ ’

The annual appropriation ordinance for the year beginning July 1, 1926, contained, among others, the following items:

Engineering services, Streets, Alleys and
Sidewalks........................ $15,000.00
Electrical and Civil Engineering services .............................. 4,000.00
Engineering services for new sewer
• system........................... 9,000.00
Legal services....................... 5,000.00
Assessor, Clerk and Stenographic services .............................. 5,000.00

In case term No.

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249 Ill. App. 586, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murrie-v-harper-illappct-1928.