Sleeper v. Bullen & Dustin

6 Kan. 300
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 6 Kan. 300 (Sleeper v. Bullen & Dustin) 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
Sleeper v. Bullen & Dustin, 6 Kan. 300 (kan 1870).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

On the 29th of May, 1867, a contract was made between the city of Leavenworth and George B. Case for the grading of a certain street in said city. Case assigned his contract to Bullen and Dustin. The ■grading was done according to contract, and the city assessed a special tax on' the lots adjacent to said street, and was about to sell said lots to pay said special tax, when the plaintiff Sleeper, with several others, petitioned the court below for an injunction to restrain said sale. On the final hearing of the case the court below refused the injunction in favor of Sleeper, and also rendered a judgment against him and in favor of the defendants Bullen and Dustin, for the amount of said special tax. This judgment, Sleeper desires to have reversed.

All the transactions which were the subject of this action, were had under chapter 70, Laws of 1867, (§ 2, p. 139;) and everything seems to have been sufficiently regular so as to give the city authority to sell said lots, for said special tax, except that the petition upon which the [306]*306contract for grading was made, was changed by one of the signers while in the custody of the city, and without the consent of a majority of the property-owners residing upon and owning the property to be taxed. On the trial it was shown also, that while the work was being done, the plaintiff Sleeper requested the contractors to do the work, and said to them that they should be paid.

co&wkey;,i“o™?S°v<;id petition. I. The first question in this case is, whether the contract with Bullen and Dustin, and the special tax levied to pay them for said grading, were legal? We think that they were not legal, for the reason that no sufficient petition was ever presented to the city council. (Ch. 70, Laws 1867, p. 139, § 2, sub-div. 2.) It therefore follows that said city had no legal right to sell said lots for said special taxes.

2 EBon»». one ¿°toTedmfees cannot enjoin aotsf0”8 ofsaoh II. The second question is, whether said Sleeper had a right to an injunction to restrain said city from selling said lots. We think he had not. (Kellogg v. Ely, 15 O. St., 64; Wiggin v. Mayor, etc., Paige 24.) A party who seeks equity, must do equity. His counsel say for him, “ it might be contended that it was a breach of faith and good morals on the part of said plaintiff Sleeper to insist upon the illegality of the tax, after an agreement to pay the same; but that is no reason why any court should refuse to grant an injunction as to a party where there is a clear violation of the law governing the contract and proceedings.” We think that a breach of faith and good morals is the strongest kind of a reason for refusing an injunction to protect the party in the exercise of such bad faith and bad morals. A party cannot encourage a wrong, and then ask a court of equity to protect him by an injunction from the consequences of that wrong. We do not think [307]*307the plaintiff Sleeper is entitled to the remedy he seeks in this case.

III. The third question is whether the city or Sleeper, or both’, or neither, are liable to the contractors for the grading, or whether the contractors can recover from any one for their services.

3. cootsact-estraNto’biluiny us validity, 1. Is the city liable? "We think it is. The petition appeared to be good upon its face. The city council, the agents of the city, and in whom is confided the province of deciding the question, decided and declared that the petition was good, and valid; and now, after the contract has been executed on the part of the contractors, after the grading has all been done, the city is estopped from denying the validity of the contract, or its liability to the contractors for the grading. (Louisville v. Hyatt, 5 B. Munroe, 199, 201; Bissell v. Jeffersonville, 24 Howard, 287, 300; Kearney v. Covington, 1 Metc. (Ky.) 339; Swift v. Williamsburg, 24 Barb. 427, 433.)

2. Is Sleeper liable ? Bid he by contract, either express or implied, make himself liable ? Or, has he either by words or acts estopped himself from denying his liability? We do not think that he is liable at all, either to the city or to the contractors. It does not follow that because he has no right, as the complaining party, to invoke the strong arm of a court of equity to interfere, and by an order of injunction, in advance, and before any wrong has been done, restrain an anticipated wrong, which possibly may never be committed, that he is entirely without remedy when attacked in a court of law. He cannot invoke equity against equity; but in law he may stand upon his legal rights. It is not, and cannot be claimed that there was any express contract between [308]*308Sleeper, and Bullen & Dustin; and neither can it be claimed that there was any implied contract between them. The agreement of- Sleeper, such as it was, was. on his side only. The contract (if it can be called a contract,) was not mutual. Bullen & Dustin never agreed to it, and it was never binding upon them. What Sleeper said to the contractors can, át most, only he said to be a proposition, and Bullen & Dustin never accepted his proposition. It is trite, they did the grading in front of said lots, as he requested them to do; but they did it, not because Sleeper requested them to do it, nor because he said that they should be paid for doing it, hut because they had made a contract with the city to do it,' and because they knew that the city was bound by its contract to pay them for so doing it.

•1.-Statements ”ñd no““Sd' liability. Usually when one person does work for- the benefit of another, with his knowledge, and without any objection from him, and without any express contract between them, the law implies a contract between them, and requires the person tor whom, the work is done, to pay for the value of the work. But when the person who does the work does it without any expectation of receiving compensation from the person benefitted, the law presumes no such implied contract. In the case at bar, the work was not done on the property of Sleeper, as such, but on a public street. It was not done for the benefit of Sleeper, (except incidentally,) but for the benefit of the public; and the contractor did not look to Sleeper for compensation, but to the citju And even if the contract between the contractors and the city had been valid, as against Sleeper, he would not have been primarily liable to the contractors. He would have been liable to the city only, and the city [309]*309would have been liable to the contractors. (Leavenworth v. Mills, ante p. 288.) Hence we cannot see how any-implied contract can be presumed in this case.

But. with reference to estoppel: A party is never estopped from proving the truth of a transaction, and from relying upon such truth, unless he has by his words or acts, caused another, to act 'differently from what ho otherwise would have acted, except for said words or acts. It is not contended that the city, (which is primarily liable to the contractors,) acted in any way different from what it would have acted, had Sleeper said nothing to the contractors; and it is not even contended that the contractors themselves acted in any way different from what they would have acted, had Sleeper said nothing to them. The city was liable to them.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Anderson v. Shannon
73 P.2d 5 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1937)
Moore v. Spanish River Land Co.
159 So. 673 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1935)
City of Punta Gorda v. Eureka Fire Hose Manufacturing Co.
158 So. 128 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1934)
Blume v. Crawford County
250 N.W. 733 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1933)
Harwell v. Hillsborough County
149 So. 547 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1933)
Arkansas River Gas Co. v. Molk
9 P.2d 623 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1932)
Barrett v. City of Osawatomie
289 P. 970 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1930)
Johnson v. Salkeld
271 P. 385 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1928)
Minneapolis Threshing Machine Co. v. Francisco
189 P. 981 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1920)
Clark v. Milwaukee Mechanics Insurance
185 P. 1056 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1919)
Kelly v. Central Union Fire Insurance
168 P. 686 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1917)
John Ritchie & Sons v. City of Wichita
163 P. 176 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1917)
O'Leary v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.
123 P. 746 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1912)
Jenkins v. Oklahoma City
1910 OK 275 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1910)
Meistrell v. Board of County Commissioners
91 P. 65 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1907)
Erickson v. Cass County
92 N.W. 841 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1903)
Willis v. Board of Com'rs
86 F. 872 (Eighth Circuit, 1898)
Hovey v. Board of Commissioners
44 P. 17 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1896)
Hutchinson & Southern Railroad v. Board of Commissioners
48 Kan. 70 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1892)
Travis v. Ward
25 P. 908 (Washington Supreme Court, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Kan. 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sleeper-v-bullen-dustin-kan-1870.