State Ex Rel. Pierce County v. King County

185 P.2d 134, 29 Wash. 2d 37, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 352
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1947
DocketNo. 30347.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 185 P.2d 134 (State Ex Rel. Pierce County v. King County) 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
State Ex Rel. Pierce County v. King County, 185 P.2d 134, 29 Wash. 2d 37, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 352 (Wash. 1947).

Opinion

Mallery, C. J.

This is an equitable action seeking the reformation of a contract on the ground of mutual mistake. From a judgment granting the relief sought, the defendants appeal.

Prior to the year 1913, floods in the White river had caused great damage in the valley between Seattle and Tacoma in both King and Pierce counties. The problem being one that concerned both counties, and it being difficult for one county to act except in conjunction with the other, the legislature in 1913 (chapter 54, p. 156) passed an act permitting counties with such problems to enter into contracts with each other which would be operative in perpetuity or for any term of years that might be agreed upon in order to effect a systematic and efficient river control project. In accordance with this act, the counties of Pierce and King on January 19, 1914, entered into a contract, wherein it was recited that the White river, which had caused all or most of the flood damage, had flowed most of the time in the past into the Duwamish river and thence into Elliott bay in King county, but that on occasions it had been *39 diverted into Stuck river, a tributary of the Puyallup river which flowed into Commencement bay in Pierce county. It further recited the damage done and provided for a project confining the White river waters in a particular 'channel and diverting it perpetually into the Puyallup river. The contract provided a plan for carrying out this project and set up the inter-county river improvement commission, composed of the county commissioners of the two counties, with the authority and duty to execute it. It provided for the levying of taxes and raising of funds for effectuating the purpose of the contract and the share of the expense to be borne by each county.

The mutual financial obligation of the two counties for the main original construction and the subsequent maintenance of the project was separated into three separate periods of time providing for different amounts to be expended in each period.

The first period, which we may describe as the construction period, called for the expenditure of $1,500,000 and contemplated completion of this phase of the work in six to eight years. Incidentally, it may be stated that disastrous floods occurring during this period destroyed much of the work accomplished, and it became apparent that, if the objectives of the contract were to be attained, additional work and funds would be necessary.

The second period was provided for in the contract as follows:

“After the work of construction shall have been completed, a fund shall be created in each county to be known as the ‘Inter-County River Improvement Fund,’ hereinafter referred to, and which may be hereafter referred to, as the ‘upkeep fund.’ The upkeep funds shall be created for the purpose of protecting and keeping in good order, repair, and efficiency the said work and of protecting the banks of said river from erosion and of confining the waters in their channel.
“Unless otherwise agreed upon by the boards of county commissioners of the two counties, acting separately, said funds shall be fifty thousand dollars ($50,000), in the aggregate, each year for the first twenty-five years following the *40 completion of the construction work, and the same shall be contributed on the same basis as the construction funds, to wit, sixty per cent by King county and forty per cent by Pierce county; and if the upkeep fund created for any one year shall not all be used for that purpose, the amount to be raised in the succeeding year shall be reduced accordingly.” (Italics ours.)

The third period was provided for in the contract as follows:

“After the expiration of said 25 year period, the obligation of upkeep shall continue on the same basis of contribution for 74 additional years, but the amount to be expended in any year for that purpose shall be determined by the joint action of the two boards in joint meeting assembled, and the tax levy shall be on the basis so determined, but shall not exceed in any one year the aggregate sum of $50,000.00.
“If for any year the amount to be raised for upkeep shall (by agreement, evidenced by separate resolutions of the two boards of county commissioners) be over fifty thousand dollars ($50,000), the excess over fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) shall be contributed equally by the two counties.” (Italics ours.)

It is this third maintenance period with which we are here concerned.

The' destruction of much of the original installations previously mentioned was specifically called to the attention of the inter-county river improvement commission by their engineers, Mr. Roberts and Mr. Thompson, who disagreed for a while as to the amount of money necessary to replace them effectively. Finally, they did agree on a plan and the estimated cost thereof, and on August 31, 1921, the parties entered into the supplemental agreement for executing the plan over which this controversy arose. By that supplemental agreement, these words were added to the contract of January 19, 1914, to provide the additional funds needed:

“Provided, that said funds shall be One Hundred Twenty Thousand Dollars ($120,000.00) in the aggregate each year for the period commencing January 1, 1922, and ending December 31, 1926.”

*41 In other words, it was found necessary to increase the expenditure of funds from fifty thousand to one hundred twenty thousand dollars per year for the first ‘five years of the second period of the contract.

The manner in which the parties entered into the supplemental agreement was that the King county and Pierce county commissioners separately adopted resolutions agreeing to it.

The supplemental agreement contained a paragraph (2) which provided:

“It is expressly stipulated and agreed that said contract dated January 19, 1914, as modified and amended by this supplemental agreement, shall be and remain in full force and effect in all respects as though the provisions of Paragraph 1 of this supplemental agreement had been included in and made a part of said original contract upon its execu-. tion.”

The form of the supplemental agreement then followed the pattern used by the legislature in amending statutes, that is to say, it substituted a reworded paragraph 5 for the former paragraph 5 in the original contract. The language of the supplemental paragraph 5 was exactly the same as before so far as it treated the subject matter thereof, with two exceptions. First, it added the part heretofore set out increasing the amount to be spent for a five-year period, and, second, it omitted that part of the original paragraph 5 which provided for the third period of seventy-four years of maintenance work.

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Bluebook (online)
185 P.2d 134, 29 Wash. 2d 37, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-pierce-county-v-king-county-wash-1947.