Springfield Milling Co. v. Lane County

5 Or. 265
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 5 Or. 265 (Springfield Milling Co. v. Lane County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Springfield Milling Co. v. Lane County, 5 Or. 265 (Or. 1874).

Opinion

By the Court,

Shattuck, J.:

This is an action at law tried in the court below upon issues of fact before the court, without a jury. The findings of the court below áre as follows:

“1. That, at the January term, 1874, of the County Court of Lane County, State of Oregon, said court, in the transaction of county business, made the following order, to wit:

“‘In the Matter of Bridge across Willamette Biver at or near Springfield.—At this day, after consideration- by the court, it is ordered that A. S. Powers be, and he is hereby appointed superintendent of the construction of a bridge across the Willamette River at or near Springfield, Lane County, Oregon, and is vested with the usual powers pro[266]*266vicled by law, subject to the following conditions, to wit: The said A. S. Powers, as such superintendent, is hereby authorized to let the contract for the construction of said bridge, stipulating that the contractors shall receive one-half of the contract price from Lane County, and the other half in subscriptions from citizens, with the express understanding that said Lane County is not to be responsible for the payment or collection of said subscription, nor, in any case, for the payment of any sum greater than one-half of the contract price for constructing said bridge; and A. S. Powers is to receive, for his services as such superintendent, in full satisfaction for the same, one hundred and fifty dollars; the said bridge to be on the plan of Smith’s Patent Truss Bridge; the superintendent to be subject to the direction of the County Court.’

“2.- That on the 4th day of March, 1874, said Powers entered into a contract on behalf of said Lane County, with the Pacific Bridge Company, to construct the bridge referred to in said order; that by said contract, said Pacific Bridge Company agreed to furnish the material fo”r said bridge, except lumber for thé aprons thereof, and construct the same, for which they were to receive, from said Lane County, the sum of five thousand three hundred dollars.

“3. That in August, 1874, said Powers purchased of the plaintiffs, for the defendant, the lumber for which this action is brought, and the same was used in the construction of the aprons to said bridge, with the knowledge and consent of the defendant herein.

“4. That the value of the lumber so purchased of plaintiffs and used by defendant, is $158.44.

“5. That, at the September term, 1874, of said County Court, the plaintiff presented his bill for the lumber above referred to, and said bill was disallowed, except eighty dollars, which the plaintiff refused to accept.”

As conclusions of law the court found:

1. That the defendant, by accepting and using the lumber mentioned in the complaint, became liable to the plaintiff for the value thereof. '

[267]*2672. That the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment against the defendant for the sum of $158.44.

The plaintiff had judgment upon these findings and the defendant (Lane County) appealed.

The plaintiffs place their right to recover on the ground that the superintendent Powers made a contract for the lumber with plaintiffs which the defendant, by accepting the bridge and offering to pay part of the price of the lumber, ratified and adopted as the contract of the county. This amounts simply to an implied contract arising from alleged benefits received.

The general doctrine unquestionably is, that when one receives the benefit of another’s work or property, he is bound to pay for the same, and this doctrine applies as well to corporations as to individuals in cases where there is no restriction imposed by- law upon the corporation against making in direct terms a contract like the one sought to be implied; but where there exist legal restrictions which disable a corporation to agree in express terms to pay money, the law will not imply any such agreement against the corporation. (Brady v. The Mayor, 2 Bosworth, 173; Zottman v. San Francisco, 20 Cal. 102-105.)

This rule may sometimes work a hardship upon a contractor, who, without having considered whether the law has been complied with or not, has performed labor or furnished material for a public corporation, and expects compensation therefor, the same as if it had been done or furnished for a private individual. But, nevertheless, the authorities hold that a contractor, no less than the officers of a municipal corporation, when dealing in a matter expressly provided for by law, must see to it that the law is complied with. Where work is done without authority upon the streets of a-city, liability does not follow because the streets maybe improved thereby or their use continued. Such continued use constitutes no such evidence of acceptance as to create a liability against the corporation. (20 Cal. 107.)

We are of the opinion that the same rules of construction which apply to and control the charters of municipal cor[268]*268porations, and the action of municipal officers, are applicable to counties and should control County Courts in the management of county business.

The question here now presented is whether or not the contract sued on is a matter expressly provided for by law, and, for that reason, subject to the principles and rules just announced. Counsel for the plaintiffs insist that it is not. He contends that the power conferred on the County Court to provide for the construction of bridges and to appropriate money therefor is a general power, and that the provisions of law, relative to the mode of proceeding, are merely directory and in no way restrict or control the discretion of the court in regard to the mode. Here is the gist of this whole case, and upon our construction of the law of this State, in this particular, the rights of the parties to this action depend.

The statutes of this State, relating to this subject, are as follows:

The act of October 11, 1862, § 870, subdivision 4, page 283, General Laws, 1872, provides that “the County Court has authority and power to provide for the erection and repairing, within the county, of public bridges upon any road or highway established by public authority.”

The act of 17th October, 1862, designated as § 71, page 737, General Laws, provides that “the County Courts of the several counties in this State be, and they are hereby authorized to apply, in their discretion, any moneys in the county treasury, not otherwise appropriated, toward defraying the expense of the building or repairing bridges on any of the county or State roads within their respective counties.”

Section 72, page 737, provides that “the County Court may appoint some suitable person to superintend the letting and building and repairing and receiving the bridge when done. Wh.en a bridge is to be built said superintendent shall put up’ three notices in the county at least twenty days prior to the time of letting such bridge, one of which shall be posted in the neighborhood where the bridge is to be built or repaired, which notice shall state the general [269]

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Bluebook (online)
5 Or. 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springfield-milling-co-v-lane-county-or-1874.