W. L. Pearson & Co. v. Hutchinson County

52 S.W.2d 509, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 740
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 13, 1932
DocketNo. 3776.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 52 S.W.2d 509 (W. L. Pearson & Co. v. Hutchinson County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. L. Pearson & Co. v. Hutchinson County, 52 S.W.2d 509, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 740 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinions

RANDOLPH, J.

The parties herein will be styled as in the trial court, Hutchinson county as plaintiff and Pearson & Co. as defendant.

This suit was filed by the plaintiff to recover of the defendant a large amount of money which had been paid by plaintiff to defendant upon certain road contracts. The case was tried before a jury, and on their answers to issues submitted, the court rendered judgment for the plaintiff. Defendant has regularly appealed to this court.

The plaintiff’s petition is necessarily *510 lengthy, but we will set out substantially the allegations of same for a proper understanding of the questions before us.

Plaintiff’s petition alleges that its commissioners’ court, as constituted in the early spring of 1927, resolved to cause certain highways to be constructed in Hutchinson county and caused its engineer to prepare certain plans of the highways to be constructed, namely, the Stinnett Road South, a paved highway from the city of Stinnett south to the town of Borger, and to the south boundary line of Hutchinson county; the Stinnett Road North, a graded highway from the town of Stinnett to a'point some séven or eight miles north; and caused to be prepared and published in a newspaper published in Hansford county, Tex., and also to be posted at one or more places in Hutchinson county, a notice to contractors notifying them that on March 8, 1927, said commissioners’ court would consider any and all sealed bids previously submitted by the contractors; that on March 8,1927, it did consider bids previously submitted, including the bid of the 'defendant company, and on the same day passed a resolution accepting the bid of the defendant company and thereafter, on the 14th day of March, 1927, said commissioners’ court and defendant company executed a written contract, supposedly pursuant to the bid and acceptance, and thereafter defendant company performed labor and furnished material at its own cost for the construction and improvement of the two roads and also improved two other graded roads known as the Stinnett Road East and the Electric City-Sanford . Road, but these two roads were not contemplated at the time of the original transaction, no plans were ever prepared for them, and no bids called for or received, and that these two roads were constructed by the defendant company without any attempt on the part of the then commissioners’ court to call for or receive competitive bids. That from time to time as defendant progressed with its work on the roads, plaintiff paid it large sums of money, paying in the aggregate more than $1,000,000.

Among other things, plaintiff alleges that all of the proceedings had in connection with the construction of the highways and the payment by plaintiff to defendant of the money were illegal and void, in that there was regularly published and circulated in Hutchinson county at all times material, a newspaper of general circulation, and that under the law governing, notice to bidders should have been published therein, and that the purported contract was let without competitive bids, in that prior to the bidding, Hutchinson county caused to be prepared and distributed to contractors potentially interested in the project, two separate and distinct sets of proposals, one set being a proposal to be used by contractors in submitting bids on the paved highway referred to as the Stinnett Road South, and the proposals for the other to be used by contractors submitting bids on the graded highway, referred to as the Stinnett Road North, and that the proposals so furnished contained the definite items and character and approximate amount thereof of the materials to be removed and materials furnished and called for a bid upon each and every item so specified, and that a number of the contractors submitting bids did so upon either one or the other of the two roads, not submitting bids upon both roads, namely, the graded road and the paved road, as one project, but that the defendant company, while submitting bids upon each and both of the proposed roads, specifically provided in each bid so submitted that the same was being submitted upon the ■ express condition that it also be awarded the contract covered and included in the bid on the other road and also be awarded all additional road work that plaintiff might elect to cause to be done, and that the proposals or bids so submitted by defendant company was not therefore in competition with any other bids submitted and not in compliance with the proposal of the plans, purposes, and intention of the commissioners’ court. Further that all the proceedings were and are void for the reason that at the time plaintiff, acting through its commissioners’ court, accepted the bid of defendant and accepted and approved its $700,000 bond for the performance of the road work on or before December 31 1927, and^ did not have the funds with which to pay for said work or any part of same, and it was not contemplated that it would pay the same out of current revenues, and that the transaction had the effect of creating a debt against plaintiff without any provision having been made for the retirement of the same as required by the Constitution of this state governing in such matters. Further, that said bids were not competitive, in that all the contractors submitting bids knew at the time of the financial condition of Hutchinson county, and that legitimate prospective bidders who otherwise would have submitted a bid were deterred and prevented from bidding due to the fact-that no provision had been made for the payment of the obligation the county proposed to incur for the improvement of its highways, and that those who did bid submitted bids far in excess of the amounts for which they would have otherwise submitted them, also to the fact that they realized that in any event there was a great uncertainty as to when, if ever, they would receive pay for their labor and material.

Plaintiff alleges other grounds rendering the entire transaction void, some of which will be discussed later.

It is further specifically alleged in said petition that should the trial court hold the proceedings void and then be of the opinion that the county could not retain the benefits and recover of the defendant all of the money that *511 it had paid it, then and in that event defendant was entitled to relief solely upon the basis of quantum meruit, and in such event plaintiff had paid the defendant under the terms of the purported contract approximately ?500,-000 in excess of the amount to which defendant would be entitled upon such basis, and prayed for general relief in this particular. Further, plaintiff specifically sets out the prices paid the defendant for certain material furnished and labor performed, alleging in certain particulars the price to which the defendant was entitled if paid upon a quantum meruit basis.

As stated, the case was submitted to a jury upon special issues and judgment rendered based on their answers thereto.

We will not attempt to discuss the questions presented in the order in which they come in plaintiff’s brief, but will discuss them in the order material to a decision of the case as we view them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 S.W.2d 509, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-l-pearson-co-v-hutchinson-county-texapp-1932.