Whitworth v. Webb City

103 S.W. 86, 204 Mo. 579, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 11, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 103 S.W. 86 (Whitworth v. Webb City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitworth v. Webb City, 103 S.W. 86, 204 Mo. 579, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 90 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

This is an action to recover the sum of $7,69240, the same being a balance claimed by plaintiff: to be due him by defendant for the construction of a public sewer in defendant city, under a general and, what is claimed by plaintiff, a special ordinance, and contract therefor, based upon certain plans and specifications covering the details and manner of construction. The length of the sewer, when completed, was about eleven thousand three hundred feet. Plaintiff recovered judgment for the sum of $7,246.55, from which judgment the defendant, after unavailing motions for new trial and in arrest, appeals.

The petition alleges that on the 12th day of August, 1901, the defendant, as a city of the third class, entered into a contract with him, in writing, for the construction of the sewer, under which the plaintiff agreed to furnish all the labor and materials and complete the sewer, in accordance with the terms and conditions of the contract, and the defendant agreed to pay therefor, according to a fixed schedule of prices, per unit, for all such labor and materials; that the contract was executed in duplicate and filed with the •city clerk, as required by law; that the work of construction was to be carried out, in accordance with the specifications adopted by the defendant and under the direction and supervision of the defendant’s city engineer, who was given power to make alterations and require additions to said specifications, all additions to be paid for at the same rate as the labor and materials originally provided for; that within the time agreed upon the plaintiff completed the construction of the [584]*584sewer, in accordance with the terms and conditions of the contract, under the orders and directions of the defendant’s city engineer;'that all labor and materials used were fully paid for hy the plaintiff and that the sewer was accepted by the defendant. Plaintiff also set out, in his petition, an itemized1 statement of the amount due at the contract price, for labor, and materials furnished, aggregating the sum of $9,692.40; credited the defendant with a payment thereon of two thousand dollars, and alleged a demand and refusal to pay the balance due; alleged that on November 18, 1901, the defendant’s city engineer filed his final and supplemental estimate of the amount due the plaintiff, in the aggregate of $9,048, and alleged that said city engineer erroneously estimated only 547 cubic yards of solid rock excavated, whereas, in truth and in fact, plaintiff excavated 611 cubic yards of solid rock, in making excavations for the sewer, and that the city engineer only estimated 4,762 cubic yards of earth and loose rock, whereas, 5,698 cubic yards were excavated under the contract. That on notice from the city engineer, after completion of the sewer, the plaintiff did certain portions thereof over; he repaired and did additional work on the sewer and re-constructed all parts that were objected to by the city engineer; that after the final and supplemental estimate by the city engineer, the defendant, on February 1, 1902, appointed a new city engineer, who attempted to make another estimate, and the inability of such new city engineer to make a proper estimate and the improper conduct on the part of such new city engineer, in the making of such new estimates, are also alleged.

The answer admits the incorporation of defendant and the payment of two thousand dollars on the contract, and denies all other allegations of the petition.

As an affirmative defense it is alleged that the sewer mentioned in the petition was a public sewer, [585]*585such as under the laws of Missouri could only be established at such points, to such extent, of such dimensions, and under such regulations, as were provided by ordinance of defendant city. That the city never passed any ordinance establishing such sewer, and fixing and defining the points where the same was established, the extent and dimensions thereof, and the regulations under which the same should be constructed, and therefore such contract as defendant’s officers may have attempted to make with plaintiff concerning said sewer was and is ultra vires and void.

That the only ordinance ever passed by defendant’s council was Ordinance No. 407, passed October 15, 1900, providing that a public outfall sewer system is hereby established, to be known as “The Yine Street Sewer,” “The Church Street Sewer” and the “Fourth Street Sewer.” “That the only provisions in said ordinance concerning said Fourth Street Sewer are:

“The Fourth Street Sewer shall begin in the center of Fourth street, at the junction of Webb street; thence west on Fourth street to Roan street; thence south to ravine; then following the natural watercourse of said ravine westward, crossing the Electric railroad át Barrett Heights Addition; thence in a more northerly direction passing west of the Webb City College, and terminating about forty rods north of the Mineral Ridge road; the Fourth Street Sewer shall be constructed of pipe ten and twelve inches in diameter, laid at an average depth of four feet.” That said ordinance is defective and insufficient in that it fails to definitely locate the points at which said sewer is to be constructed, the extent and dimensions thereof, the material and quality thereof, out of which the same is to be constructed, and fails to provide any regulation for the construction thereof, as to the method or time of construction, the kind and quality of material to be used or otherwise; by reason whereof any contract defend[586]*586ant’s officers may have attempted to make with plaintiff concerning said sewer was and is ultra vires and void.

That on August 12,1901, the mayor and city clerk of defendant undertook to enter into a contract with plaintiff for the construction of a public sewer in said Fourth Street Sewer District, but said contract, as above stated, was unauthorized and void. That whatever work defendant did under said pretended contract was not done between the points and along the route indicated in and by said Ordinance No. 407, but was done along a different route and between different points.

The answer also charges that its city engineer Bell’s estimate of $9,049.50, and the claim of plaintiff as submitted to defendant’s counsel for $9,995.25, were fraudulently made by said parties with intent thereby to cheat and defraud defendant. That the work done and material used by plaintiff under said pretended contract amounted to only $4,161.08, so that if said contract, or any part of it, he held legal and binding on defendant, plaintiff is only entitled to receive, for so much thereof as is so legal and binding, for the quantities and at the price last above stated. That when plaintiff claimed to have finished the work, defendant’s then city engineer, Atwater, made a correct final estimate of $4,161.08 and defendant refused to receive the work under the estimates of Bell or plaintiff.

That plaintiff’s claim was never properly presented to defendant in writing as required by law, with a full amount of the items, verified by the oath of the claimant, or his agent, that the same were correct, reasonable and just.

Then follows a claim for damages for failure to complete sewer within time required by the pretended contract, if same be held valid.

The reply is a general denial, with statement of [587]*587matters directed solely to defendant’s claim for damages.

The facts are about as follows:

On October 15', 1900, the council of defendant passed an ordinance, No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 S.W. 86, 204 Mo. 579, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitworth-v-webb-city-mo-1907.