Smith v. Town of Vinton

25 So. 2d 237, 209 La. 587, 1946 La. LEXIS 715
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 11, 1946
DocketNo. 37751.
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 25 So. 2d 237 (Smith v. Town of Vinton) 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
Smith v. Town of Vinton, 25 So. 2d 237, 209 La. 587, 1946 La. LEXIS 715 (La. 1946).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

Plaintiff, William R. Smith, who operates under the trade name of Electric Contracting Company, is appealing from a judgment dismissing his suit, the district court having sustained exceptions of no right and no cause of action directed by defendant, the Town of Vinton, to the allegations of the petition.

To summarize the petition’s substantial factual averments, which are to be accepted as true for the purpose of considering defendant’s exceptions, plaintiff on March 20, 1944, entered into a verbal contract with W. J. Romero, Mayor of the Town of Vinton, for his furnishing of the labor and equipment necessary in the repair of the electrical distribution system owned and operated by that municipality, he to be paid weekly as the work progressed. The Mayor, at the time, represented that he was duly authorized to make the contract and to proceed with the work, and further that an emergency existed because the system was in a condition dangerous to life and property, on all of which representations plaintiff relied. Defendant used the distribution system not only for municipal purposes, but also in furnishing electricity to the inhabitants of the town and to persons residing outside of its corporate limits.

Pursuant to the contract plaintiff commenced the repair job on March 27, 1944, and continued it until April 11, 1944, at *591 which time he was forced to cease his work because defendant’s failure to make any of the agreed payments. For the labor, materials and equipment furnished and used between those dates defendant is indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $3986.09.

Throughout the construction period all of the members of the Town Council witnessed the performance of the work and knew that the repairs were being made. Also they knew that the system was in a condition dangerous to life and property, that an emergency existed, and that plaintiff had been authorized by the Mayor to proceed with the undertaking. Notwithstanding such knowledge, not one offered any protest or objection. Defendant has used and is using the construction work performed on the system, and is reaping the benefits of the labor, materials and equipment furnished by plaintiff at his cost and expense.

After specially pleading estoppel, plaintiff prayed for judgment on the contract in the sum of the alleged indebtedness, or, alternatively, on quantum meruit for the amount of the claim.

In this court, defendant, under its exceptions, first calls attention to plaintiff’s failure to allege that the Town of Vinton, its Mayor, or anyone else, obtained the consent of the State Bond and Tax Board for the incurring of the debt, and it contends that, because of such omission, the petition discloses no cause of action.

Act No. 6 of the Second Extra Session of the Legislature of 1935 created the State Bond and Tax Board, and it declared to be null, void and unenforceable any contract, debt, obligation, bond, or other evidence of indebtedness whatsoever, incurred or issued by any of the named political subdivisions, boards and districts, including municipalities, without the consent and approval of such Board. The statute uses very broad, sweeping language, and under a literal construction of it plaintiff’s claim would be affected. But in applying, a statute to specific cases it is necessary to determine the intent of the Legislature in enacting it. A well established rule of statutory construction is that courts will not impute meanings to statutes which will lead to absurd results or extend the statutes to situations which the Legislature never intended should be covered thereby. That this rule is recognized in our jurisprudence is disclosed by the following expressions:

“ * * * But even if the language of the act is as broad as opponents contend, it is then the duty of the court to restrain its operation within narrower limits than its words import, if the Court is satisfied that their literal meaning would extend to cases which the legislature never intended to include.” In re Hibernia Bank & Trust Co., 185 La. 448, 169 So. 464, 473.
“In the construction of statutes absurd results should be avoided, and when the literal construction would produce such a result, the letter of the law must give way to its spirit and the statute should be construed so as to produce a reasonable result. * * * ” Gremillion v. Louisiana *593 Public Service Commission et al., 186 La. 295, 172 So. 163, 165.
“ * * * The function of the courts of justice is to interpret the laws so as to give them the meaning which the lawmaker obviously intended them to have, and not to construe them so rigidly as to give them absurd or ridiculous meanings.” State ex rel. Womack v. Jones, 201 La. 637, 10 So.2d 213, 217.

The Town of Vinton is authorized by law to own and operate an electrical distribution system. Act 136 of 1898, as amended (Dart’s Statutes Section 5420), grants to municipal corporations the power “to purchase or erect and to own, operate, and maintain electric and gas light plants, * * * any other revenue producing proper public utility, within or without their corporate limits and to regulate the same and to fix the rates for the consumption of the service so furnished.” And the same act (Dart’s Statutes Section 5423) gives to the Mayor and Aldermen of cities and towns the authority “to provide for the lighting of streets, parks, and public grounds and the erection of lamps and lamp posts.” Having installed the system, pursuant to the mentioned statutory authorization, of necessity the Town of Vinton must maintain it in good repair and in an operating condition. It follows naturally that the repair work required in this case, and which was performed by plaintiff, was within the ordinary and usual course of the town’s administration; it was not an unusual undertaking.

In Laycock v. City of Baton Rouge, 35 La.Ann. 475, the court held on rehearing that the purchasing of gas by the defendant was an act within the course of ordinary administrative duties and, therefore, exempt from the effect of Revised Statutes Section 2448 requiring that provision for payment of a debt be made by a municipality before the contracting of it.

The holding of the Laycock case was affirmed in Blanks v. City of Monroe, 110 La. 944, 34 So. 921, 923. In allowing recovery for a balance due for water and light furnished the municipality under contract, the court said:

“It has more than once been held by this court that contracts such as that here sued on, whereby municipal corporations undertake to make provision in advance for such prime necessities as light and water, and incur obligations therefor, to be met from time to time, as those necessities are furnished, from current revenues, do not fall within the restrictive operation of Rev. St. 1870, § 2448, which prohibits such corporations from contracting debts without providing, in the ordinances by which they are contracted, for their payment. * * *”

If the purchasing of necessities such as gas and water and light is considered as being within the course of ordinary municipal administration, so must the repair and maintenance of a city’s electrical system, when it is legally owned and operated as in this case, be considered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 So. 2d 237, 209 La. 587, 1946 La. LEXIS 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-town-of-vinton-la-1946.