Wade v. City of Tacoma

230 P. 99, 131 Wash. 245, 1924 Wash. LEXIS 855
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1924
DocketNo. 18418
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 230 P. 99 (Wade v. City of Tacoma) 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
Wade v. City of Tacoma, 230 P. 99, 131 Wash. 245, 1924 Wash. LEXIS 855 (Wash. 1924).

Opinions

Tolman, J.

This appeal is by a number of interested property owners seeking reversal of a judgment dismissing their action to enjoin the city of Tacoma from paying to the contractor a sum in excess of the contract price for the making of certain street improvements.

On September 13, 1922, the city council passed a resolution to widen the pavement then existing on St. Helens avenue in that city for a distance of three blocks, and to resurface the whole with asphaltic concrete to a depth of approximately two inches; the construction of a concrete retaining wall along a designated portion of the lower side of the street; and the removal and replacing of ornamental lamps. Prior to the ordering of the improvement, after the initiatory resolution passed by the city council, a preliminary estimate of the cost was made, of which several property owners were notified. This estimated cost was $30,327.44, which included estimated engineering expenses of $3,500. Plans and specifications were prepared by the city engineer for the improvement, which were duly adopted; advertisements for proposals for bids were made, and upon receipt of bids a contract was let to the respondent Torkelson on a lump sum bid with units separately priced, pursuant to the call for bids for the computation of all extras and deductions, to complete the entire improvement for the sum of $29,480. The contract called for the completion of the work according to the plans and specifications prepared by the city engineer, which work included the widening and resurfacing of the street and “doing all other necessary work to bring the finished surface to a proper grade and crown;” construction of Portland cement concrete retaining wall and filling in back of the same, “the excavation for all walls to be carried [247]*247down to a depth satisfactory to the commissioner of public works or his representative.” The exact location of the wall was designated. The contract also called for the removal of street lamps at the expense of the contractor.

The contractor completed the work and, at the conclusion thereof, an assessment roll was prepared for a sum total of $39,459.70. This included the contract price of $29,480, to which had been added so-called extras ordered and allowed by the city engineer and the commissioner of public works amounting to $12,175.45, from the total of which was subtracted $737.75 as the value of work omitted and an excess of $1,458.90 on the engineering estimate, which was originally $3,500.

A time was set for hearing on the confirmation of this assessment roll. Notice of the time and place of such hearing was duly published in the city official paper, which is a paper of general but not extensive circulation, but that notice the appellants claim never to have seen. Nothing was stated in the notice as to any increase in the roll over the original estimate or the contract price. None of the property owners had any actual notice of the hearing on the assessment roll or of the increase over the contract price or the original estimate.

At the time the roll was confirmed, none of the property owners filed any objections or appeared, and none of the city commissioners, except the commissioner of public works under whose direction the roll had been prepared, had knowledge that the roll exceeded the original estimate or the contract price. The mayor and certain councilmen admitted that they would not have confirmed the roll had the council known the facts, and the commissioner of public works admitted that he had [248]*248not sufficiently called tlie attention of the mayor and the council to the fact that the assessment roll exceeded the original estimate or the contract price. The roll was, however, at all times on file in the office of the city clerk. It was before the city council at the time of its confirmation, and immediately after the confirmation the property owners were notified by post card of the actual amount assessed against their properties. Thereupon various owners appeared before the council and asked relief. The council, for the first time being informed of the facts, referred the matter to the city attorney to ascertain if its action could be rescinded. The city attorney, fearing that such an attempt would involve the city in litigation with the contractor, advised against a rescission, and no further action was taken by the city council.

• This action was then commenced to enjoin the payment to the contractor of any sum in excess of that which he was entitled to receive under the terms of his contract, and to cancel the assessment roll. By trial amendment it was also alleged that, after bids were invited, the specifications were changed in the contract with Torkelson, in order to make legal, if possible, the additional payment. Upon the trial the court below refused to permit a witness named Warter, who had contemplated bidding for the contract, to testify as to a difference in the specifications furnished to him by the engineering department upon which to bid from the specifications attached to the contract with Torkel-son. The court also refused to permit the city comptroller to testify that no previous or subsequent contract had ever been entered into by the city containing the interlineations which appear in the specifications attached to the contract in question. The witness Warter was not permitted to testify that he called the [249]*249attention of the engineering department of the city, prior to the opening of the bids, to the fact that the estimates were insufficient and the plans defective. Cross-examination of the city engineer was not permitted as to the reasons why the specifications in this particular instance contained interlineations not found in any other specifications.

The rulings of the court above indicated, together with the refusal to enter judgment for the appellants as prayed for, constitute the errors claimed on this appeal.

In summing up the case, the trial judge stated that the evidence did not show any actual fraud, and that what would constitute constructive fraud under the circumstances might be a matter of dispute which he would not go into; that what impressed him was that, under the proof, the contractor would probably have been largely the loser had he been compelled to receive only the contract price; and, after some further observations, the trial court concluded that he could find no equity on the showing made by the appellants.

The record shows, and it is admitted, that the engineering department of the city made a gross mistake in the estimate. It is contended that this mistake was not discovered until the contract had been let and the contractor had entered upon the premises and the work. It seems possible, therefore, that, in order to rectify this mistake and justify the additional payments necessary to make the contractor whole, the specifications were then altered by adding with pen and ink the four words “without extra compensation therefor,” which will be hereinafter further referred to.

"When fraud is alleged, the widest latitude should be permitted in the introduction of evidence, and we [250]*250think the trial court should have received the offered testimony; but even so, since every intendment must be indulged in support of a public record, there might reasonably be differences of opinion as to whether, if the appellants had been permitted to prove all they offered to prove, that would have been sufficient to impeach the record, and had the trial court admitted the evidence and held it insufficient, we could not have interfered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 P. 99, 131 Wash. 245, 1924 Wash. LEXIS 855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wade-v-city-of-tacoma-wash-1924.