Beveridge v. Livingstone

By the Court:

This is an action brought on a street assessment, for work clone in San Francisco.

The time prescribed in the contract expired on the 12th of September, 1877. On the 17th of December, 1877, the Board of Supervisors attempted to authorize the Superintendent of Streets to grant an extension of time to complete the work, which extension was granted by said Superintendent on the 21st of December, 1877.

We are of the opinion that the Board of Supervisors had no power under the present law (Stats. 1871-72, p. 808) to extend the time for the completion of street work after the expiration of the time prescribed in the contract. The language of the law is: “ But should the said contractor or the property owners fail to prosecute the same diligently or continuously, in the judgment of said Superintendent of Public Streets, Highways, and Squares, or to complete it within the time prescribed in the contract, or within such extended time, then it shall be the duty of said Superintendent of Public Streets, Highways, and Squares to report the same to the Board of Supervisors, who shall, xoithout further petition on behalf of the property owners, order the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors to advertise for bids, as in the first instance, and relet the contract in the manner hereinbefore provided.”

It may be admitted that the Superintendent, Avith the consent of the Board of Supervisors, may extend the time fixed by the terms of the contract, provided such extension be made prior to the expiration of the contract time. But it is plain that immediately upon the expiration of the contract time, or of the time thus extended, the obligation is imposed, upon the Superintendent of Public Streets to report the delinquency of the contractor to the Board, and on the Board, upon such report being received, a like obligation to advertise and relet the contract. To hold that either the Board of Supervisors or the Superintendent of Public Streets may extend the time for completing the work after the expiration of the contract time, or of the time as ex*57tended by order before the expiration of the contract time, would be to relieve the Board and the Superintendent of the obligation imposed upon them by the statute, and the contractor from the consequences of his delinquency.

In opposition to this view, Taylor v. Palmer, 31 Cal. 246, is cited by respondent’s counsel. That case, so far as this point is concerned, is commented upon and doubted in Turney v. Dougherty, 53 Cal. 619; and we are not inclined to be controlled by the authority of the former further than as it construes the exact language of the Statute of 1863, under which it was decided.

The act last cited directed the Superintendent to report the delinquency to the Board of Supervisors, who had the discretion thereupon to relet the unfinished portion of the work. But the language of the 6th section of the Act of 1872, above cited, seems by its terms intended explicitly to exclude the exercise by the Board or Superintendent of any power to extend the time for the completion of the work, after the expiration of the contract time or of the extension ordered during the running of the contract time. Whatever the meaning of the former statute, it is plain that the law of 1872 is to be construed as mandatory, and as leaving no discretion in the Superintendent at the expiration of the contract time or of the time as extended prior to the expiration of the contract time. Nor is the result changed by the provision that “ in all cases ” where the Superintendent, under the direction of the Supervisors, has extended the time for the performance of contracts, “the same shall be held to have been legally extended.” This provision contains no grant of power to the Superintendent or Supervisors, but only declares the legal effect of the employment of power previously granted.

Judgment reversed and cause remanded, with directions to . overrule the demurrer to the answer. Remittitur forthwith.