State, Ex Rel. Unit. Destructor v. Wiegand, Mayor

159 N.E. 140, 26 Ohio App. 154, 5 Ohio Law. Abs. 512, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 510
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 16, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 159 N.E. 140 (State, Ex Rel. Unit. Destructor v. Wiegand, Mayor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State, Ex Rel. Unit. Destructor v. Wiegand, Mayor, 159 N.E. 140, 26 Ohio App. 154, 5 Ohio Law. Abs. 512, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 510 (Ohio Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

*155 Sullivan, P. J.

This is an action in mandamus and is here on proceedings in error to the court of common pleas of Cuyahoga county, and a writ is sought to compel the respondent, Edward A. "Wiegand, as mayor and director of public works of the city of Lakewood, Ohio, in his capacity as ex officio director of public works of the city, to execute a contract with the Universal Destructor Company, the relator, whose terms provide for the building of a garbage crematory at a figure of $70,485. The council, upon a reconsideration of the bids, awarded, the contract for the construction of the crematory to the Universal Destructor Company, the relator, and the mayor, as director of public works, refused to execute the contract.

It is a clashing of authority between the legislative and executive departments of the city government, which is operating under a charter of its own, the council claiming the authority to award the bid, and the director of public works denying the same, and both claiming authority under the provisions of the charter for their respective acts.

It is well settled that in order to entitle the relator to a writ of mandamus the respondent must refuse or neglect to perform a duty specifically enjoined upon him as director of public works by the law. Therefore, to determine whether the relator is entitled to the writ it is necessary that the duty to be performed be incorporated in the law, because an official duty cannot be compelled which is not enjoined by legal authority, and this authority must expressly and unambiguously appear in the law itself, whether it be a provision of the charter or of the statute of the state, or both.

*156 The relator seeks this extraordinary writ because the respondent refuses to execute the contract awarded by the council to it as the lowest and best bidder for the crematory. Therefore, there must be express legal authority in the charter or the statute authorizing the council to award the bid, and compelling the director of public service to execute the contract thereupon and thereafter.

We eliminate much that is confusing in the case, if we adhere to the fundamental proposition that a writ of mandamus is a remedy extraordinary, and can only be issued in cases of emergency, when there is no plain and adequate remedy at law, and where, under the law and the record, the relator is clearly and plainly entitled to the writ. If it is a question discretionary with the respondent, the court has no right to interfere, unless it appears that the transaction is tainted with fraud, or that there is a gross abuse of sound discretion; and this element does not appear in this record, for the reason that the transaction is in no manner tainted with collusion, conspiracy, or fraud. It is simply a question of the interpretation of the provisions of the charter and the laws of Ohio with relation to the power and authority of the council as a legislative body, and of the mayor and director of public service with respect to executive duty.

Under the terms of the charter, the legislative powers of the city of Lakewood, except as limited by the charter, are vested in a council of five members, elected at large, and the charter provides with respect to the respondent mayor that he shall be ex officio director of public works and shall have direct charge of the department of public works, *157 and in addition there are various and numerous duties relating to the department of public works which are enjoined upon the mayor and director of public works ex officio by the express provisions of the charter, and they seem to be sufficiently inclusive to take in the entire range of public works as they affect the municipality, and it is significant that these duties of the respondent are all under the heading, “The Executive.”

A fair and reasonable interpretation of the charter is that the executive power and the legislative power are separate and distinct legal entities, and each is confined to its own duties and obligations under the charter, separate and distinct from the other branch, except when the terms of the charter itself prescribe joint duties. Section 3 of the charter provides:

“The mayor shall be ex officio the director of public safety and the director of public works and as such shall exercise all powers and perform all duties delegated to and conferred upon the director of public safety and the director of public works by this charter, the ordinances of the city and the laws of the state of Ohio.”

In other words, it seems to be the conception of the drafters of the charter, by reason of the extensive powers and responsibilities cast upon the director of public works, that the person holding such office shall be one capable of performing and shouldering the great responsibilities of the office, and whose judgment and skill are of such a high character that the charter obligations applying to him may be discharged with probity, efficiency, and skill. Therefore, apparently with this view in *158 mind, the following paragraph of article 5 of the charter, under the heading “Department of Public Works,” was incorporated therein and adopted:

“Public improvements, works and repairs of all kinds shall be made by the department of public works either by direct employment of labor and the purchase of the necessary supplies and material with a separate accounting as to each improvement so made, or by contract. The council shall by ordinance determine by which method any improvement shall be made. All such contracts shall be executed in the name of the city by the director of public works and approved by the council, and shall be entered into only with the lowest best bidder after public competitive bidding. The director of public works when authorized by resolution of the council may enter into a contract not involving an expenditure in excess of $500 for supplies or any public work, without public competitive bidding.”

The serious contention lies in the interpretation of the following language selected from the above quotation, to-wit, “All such contracts shall be executed in the name of the city by the director of public works and approved by the council, and shall be entered into only with the lowest best bidder after public competitive bidding.” In the language quoted, there is no uncertainty or ambiguity, and hence the words interpret themselves. They are plain, unmistakable, and easy of comprehension, and when it is provided that all contracts shall be executed by the director of public works in the name of the city it means that the agreement shall be signed by the director. In other words, he becomes a party to the contract. In the instant case the relator would be one party, the respondent an *159 other. Under this clause the director has the power to sign the name of the corporation by himself as director of public works, and then and thereupon there is created a contract signed by the contracting parties, and all that is needed to make it a binding contract is the approval of the city council.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 N.E. 140, 26 Ohio App. 154, 5 Ohio Law. Abs. 512, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-unit-destructor-v-wiegand-mayor-ohioctapp-1927.