Wiese & Hanley v. City of Cincinnati

17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 481
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedNovember 15, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 481 (Wiese & Hanley v. City of Cincinnati) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiese & Hanley v. City of Cincinnati, 17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 481 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

G-eoghegan, J.

This was an action to recover from the city of Cincinnati the sum of $1,172.25, being1' a retained ten pereentum of the amount found to be due under a certain contract entered into between the plaintiffs and the defendant, the city of Cincinnati.

Counsel for both parties have agreed upon all matters, including the amount to be paid to plaintiffs in case the courts determine in their favor the single issue presented by counsel and hereinafter noted.

On the 4th day of October, 1904, the plaintiffs submitted a. certain bid for a street improvement in the city of Cincinnati, [482]*482known as the improvement of Kineon avenue from Maxwell place to Rudolph avenue, by grading, setting curbs and crossings, flagging and paving gutters, and macadamizing the roadway, and constructing the necessary drains and Retaining Avails. On November 9th of the same year they Avere awarded the contract and shortly thereafter proceeded with the AAmrk and completed it, and upon certificate of the engineer were paid ninety per cent, of the total cost thereof, ten per cent being retained under the terms of the contract'for five years as a guarantee that the plaintiffs Avould keep the street in good and proper repair.

It is conceded that all the necessary statutory steps in regard io this kind of improvement Avere carried out, and counsel for the parties have agreed as to certain, differences that existed between the parties as to the amount of repair work done during the five year period by the city, AAdiieh Avas to be charged under the contract to the plaintiffs.

The only defense that the city of Cincinnati now makes to this action is that the contract Avas illegal and void, inasmuch as the bid presented for the work did not contain a separate statement of the labor and material to be used, with the price thereof, as provided by Section 4329 of the General Code.

■ The various items of the bid, as shown from Exhibit “A” attached to the ansAver of the city, were as folloAvs:

Broken stone, per cu. yd............................ $1.50
Crossings, per lin. ft................................ .50
Curbs, Pattern—
B 5 inch limestone.............................. .70
B 5 inch limestone circular...................... 1.40
Grading, per cu." yd.................... .33
Limestone screenings.........................2.50
Gutters, flagging and limestone, per lin. ft............. 1.10
Rolling, per sq. yd.................................. .04
Masonry rubble, uneoursed, per cu. yd............... 4.00

■With reference to the above, the folloAving stipulation was entered into by counsel:

[483]*483“It is hereby agreed and understood by the parties herein that the allegations of the reply and supplemental reply are not intended to and do not deny the allegation in the first defense of the answer, that the price of labor and materials were not separately stated in this contract, other than as shown by the bid, page 3, Exhibit ‘A,’ which-plaintiffs claim shows a separation of work and material. It is left to the court to decide whether there was in fact such a separation as shown by the contract and bid involved in this case.
“ It is further stipulated and agreed by and between plaintiffs and defendant that all other defenses raised by the answer of the defendant herein are waived and that as to such other defenses, the equities and law of the case are with the plaintiffs and that in the event the issue raised by the first defense is decided in favor of plaintiffs, that a judgment is to be rendered in favor of-plaintiffs for eleven hundred ($1,100) dollars.”

Passing for the present the question of whether or not there was an actual separation of labor and material, counsel for the city contends, in support of his motion for judgment, that the doctrine laid down in McCloud v. Columbus. 54 Ohio State, 439, to the effect that the restrictive conditions of statutes with reference to municipal corporations must be strictly complied with in order that a recovery may be had on-the contract, is applicable to the state of facts before us here.

I have made a careful and exhaustive examination of the authorities in this state supporting this doctrine, and find that in McCloud v. Columbus, supra, there was a failure to advertise for bids; that in Lancaster v. Miller, 58 Ohio State, 558, there was a failure to advertise and a failure to obtain a certificate of the auditor or clerk that there was a sufficient amount in the fund set aside for the purpose to pay the city’s portion for the work done under the contract. In Buchanan Bridge Company v. Campbell et al, 60 Ohio State, 406, there was an absolute failure on. the part of the county commissioners to comply with any of the provisions of the statutes with reference to the building and constructing of county bridges and the action of the plaintiff was based entirely upon a quantum meruit. In Comstock v. Village of Nelsonville, 61 Ohio State, 228, there was a failure to obtain the clerk’s certificate. In Wellston v. Morgan, 65 Ohio [484]*484State, 219, there was no ordinance of council authorizing the improvement. In Village of Carthage v. Dickmeier, 79 Ohio State, 223, there was no clerk’s certificate as to the availability of the funds as provided by the so-called Burns law.

It will be observed that in all the above cases there ivas an absolute failure to comply with those restrictive provisions of the statute with reference to public improvements, that are designed to prevent municipal extravagance and undue favoritism on the part of municipal officers towards persons seeking contracts for public work. To this extent, however, and no further has the Supreme Court gone. The Supreme Court has not at all decided that under no circumstances shall the municipality be estopped to deny its liability because oE failure to comply with the strict letter of the statute, but has held that wherever there has been a failure to substantially comply with a restrictive provision of the statutes then no estoppel will lie. However, in the case at bar it is conceded that there was a substantial compliance with the statute in reference to all those conditions referred to in the various cases above, and that the city accepted the work and paid for it with the exception of the retained ten pereentum.

I am rather inclined to the opinion that the doctrine laid down in Mt. Vernon v. State, 71 Ohio State, 528, should be applied to the facts of the case at bar. The first paragraph of the syllabus in that case is as follows:

“Where a municipal corporation has entered into a contract with an individual, under and by virtue oE a statute which is unconstitutional and the subject-matter of the contract is not ultra vires, illegal or malum prohibitum, and the facts are such, as against the corporation, as would estop an individual from setting up as a defense the unconstitutionality of the statute, the municipal corporation will also be so estopped.”

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Related

McGonigale v. City of Defiance
140 F. 621 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiese-hanley-v-city-of-cincinnati-ohctcomplhamilt-1913.