Richards v. Bussell

127 P. 198, 70 Wash. 554, 1912 Wash. LEXIS 1082
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1912
DocketNo. 10392
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 127 P. 198 (Richards v. Bussell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richards v. Bussell, 127 P. 198, 70 Wash. 554, 1912 Wash. LEXIS 1082 (Wash. 1912).

Opinion

Parker, J.

This is an action to foreclose a number of liens upon certain tide land lots in Seattle, evidenced by certificates issued by the commissioner of public lands of the state of Washington under the provisions of the act of 1893 relating to the excavation of waterways and filling of tide [556]*556lands by private contract. A decree of foreclosure was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, but for less amounts than were evidenced by the certificates, and claimed by him. Both the plaintiff and the defendants have appealed; so to avoid confusion we will hereafter refer to them as such.

On October 27, 1894, under the authority of the Laws of 1893, p. 241 (Rem. & Bal. Code, §§ 8100-8109), the state of Washington, by its commissioner of public lands, entered into two contracts with Eugene Semple, by the terms of which he was to excavate waterways through certain lands situated within and adjacent to the corporate boundaries of the city of Seattle and, with the material taken from the waterways, fill and raise above high tide tide lands adjacent thereto then belonging to the state, and thereby become entitled to liens upon such filled in tide lands, for the amount of the cost of the filling of the same with fifteen per cent additional thereon, as provided by the act. Soon thereafter, and before doing any work thereunder, Eugene Semple duly assigned his interest in the contracts to the Seattle and Lake Washington Waterway Company, a domestic corporation. We will hereafter refer to this company as the Waterway Company. These assignments were assented to by the state, and thereby the Waterway Company succeeded to all the obligations and rights of Eugene Semple.

In the fall of 1907, .the Waterway Company having caused to be completed certain portions of the excavation of the waterways and filling of the lands, the commissioner of public lands issued to it certificates reciting the completion of such parts of the work, describing the tide lands so filled in by lot and block numbers according to the ofiicial plat of Seattle tide lands, and stating in the certificates the amount of the cost of the filling in and raising above high tide of each of such lots separately, which amounts, with fifteen per cent additional thereon, were certified by the commissioner to be the amounts of the liens the Waterway Company was entitled to upon each of the lots respectively, under the con[557]*557tracts and the law in pursuance of which they were entered into. A number of these certificates, issued in September and October, 1907, form the basis of the plaintiff’s several causes of action in this foreclosure. The certificates were duly recorded in the office of the auditor of King county, and thereafter by mesne assignments became the property of this plaintiff. After entering into the contracts for the excavation of the waterways and filling of the tide lands, and before the completion of the work upon which these certificates were issued, the state contracted for the sale of the tide land lots here involved to the predecessors in interest of the defendants, and thereafter in February, 1906, by deed conveyed the lands here involved, by lot and block numbers according to the official plat of tide lands of Seattle, subject however to liens which might accrue under these contracts for the excavation of the waterways and the filling of the lots. The contracts for the excavation and filling did not in terms fix the amount of the cost of the work, but provided that,

“The entire cost of said work herein provided for, including the cost of bulkhead and seawalls, shall not exceed sixteen cents per cubic yard for each and every yard of earth put upon each tract or parcel of land to which any person or corporation has a pre-emption right of purchase, except as herein otherwise provided.”

By the terms of the contracts, this limit of the cost of the work might be exceeded by the increased cost of bulkheads and retaining walls caused by such modifications of the plans and specifications therefor as might be deemed necessary to be made during the progress of the work, which modifications the commissioner of public lands was by the terms of the contract authorized to make, and “cause such increased expense to be estimated and with the approval of the Governor shall specify the sum in addition to said sixteen cents per cubic yard to which the entire cost of such work shall be limited.”

[558]*558After entering into the contracts, and before contracting to sell the tide lands and before the portion of the work here involved was done, the state platted the tide lands into streets, lots and blocks, and thereafter both the streets and the lots were filled under the contracts. Upon the completion of the portion of the work affecting the lots here involved, as decided by the commissioner of public lands, he determined the cost of such work to be sixteen cents per cubic yard for the filling of the lots and streets, to which he added an allowance for extra cost for bulkheads, all of which he apportioned and charged to the several lots here involved as the actual cost of the work. These several charges, so apportioned, with the fifteen per cent additional allowed by law, the commissioner certified as the amounts of the liens the Waterway Company was entitled to upon the several lots under the law and the contracts. By its decree of foreclosure, the trial court found the cost of the work to be thirteen cents per cubic yard instead of sixteen cents, as certified by the commissioner; and awarded foreclosure accordingly, allowing all other charges as determined and certified by the commissioner. Other facts will be noticed as may become necessary in our discussion of the several questions presented.

It will be convenient to first have before us the provisions of the act of 1898 relating to the excavation of waterways and tide lands by private contract. Those provisions requiring our notice, referring to them by the section numbers of Hem. & Bal. Code, are the following:

“Section 8100. The commissioner of public lands of the state of Washington may, when in his judgment the interests of commerce would be subserved thereby, enter into contract with any person or persons, or incorporated companies doing business in the state of Washington, for the excavation of any waterway or waterways through any lands belonging to the state of Washington, or to any citizen or corporation of said state, and for the filling in and raising above high tide of any tide or shore lands belonging to the state of Washington, and upon the completion of such contract such [559]*559person or persons or incorporated company shall become entitled to and shall have a lien, as in this chapter provided, upon all tide and shore lands belonging to the state of Washington, adjacent to such waterway, and remaining unsold at the date of the approval of this act, that they may fill in and raise above high tide, and all purchasers of said tide and shore lands from the state of Washington shall take the same subject to said lien.”
“Section 8103.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 P. 198, 70 Wash. 554, 1912 Wash. LEXIS 1082, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richards-v-bussell-wash-1912.