McCann v. Carlson

Bubke, J.

At the general election held in Mountrail county • in 1912, the voters authorized the issuance of $50,000 in bonds for the purpose of providing a courthouse for said county. The bonds were sold at par, and the county commissioners thereupon proceeded to advertise for bids for the construction of said building, which bids were receivable August 12, 1913. The defendant Bartleson was the lowest responsible bidder, and received the contract at $49,660. The 5th day of August, 1913, such contract was formally signed, and thereafter, and on the 3d day of September, 1913, said Bartleson executed and filed a bond for the faithful performance of his part of the contract. At the time of the execution of the said contract, one Taylor had offered to donate a site for the courthouse and his offer had been accepted by said county commissioners. It is contended that Mr. Taylor had not at that time any title to the property, but had made arrangements for condemning part thereof. The contract entered into with Bartleson contains no provisions for modern heating, lighting, or sewerage systems. On the 23d of September, 1913, this action was commenced, accompanied by the service of a temporary restraining order, and such restraining order was later, and after a hearing, dissolved by the trial court. This appeal is from such order.

Appellant assigns three propositions in support of such restraining ■order. It is conceded that the question of the erection of the courthouse and the issuance and sale of the bonds had been authorized by *194a vote of tbe people, and tbat all steps leading up to tbe said contract were regular, excepting in tbe three aforesaid particulars.

(1) First, appellant insists tbat tbe contract was void because the bond furnished by tbe contractor under §§ 2421, 6252-6255, B,ev. Codes 1905, was not furnished until after the signing of the contract. In this we cannot agree with appellant. The said sections could not have contemplated that a failure to give the bond prior to the actual signing of the contract should vitiate the contract, because § 6253 provides that “the members of any board who shall fail to take such a bond before entering into such a contract shall be personally liable for all such bills, claims, and demands which shall not be paid within thirty days after the completion of the work.” In this instance the bond had been furnished, approved, and filed before this action was commenced, and we think it plain that the contract is not assailable by reason of the irregularity.

(2) It is next alleged that the' contract is void because the title to the courthouse site had not been vested in the county at the time of the execution of the contract. From the minutes of the county commissioners it appears that one B. W. Taylor had offered to donate a tract of land 223' x 432', which was owned by him, and had also offered to pay all costs and damages that the county might incur in condemnation proceedings in acquiring an adjoining tract of the same area. This offer had been accepted by the board, and in the absence of a showing to the contrary, it will be presumed that the county commissioners have taken all due precautions in the premises, and that they can compel Mr. Taylor to fulfil his contract, and that they will obtain the title to the tract in due time.

(3) The third attack upon the contract, and in fact the principal one relied upon by the defendant, is that the contract itself makes no provision for lighting, heating, and sewerage systems. Appellant contends that the voters, in authorizing the commissioners to spend $50,-000 in providing the county with a courthouse, had limited them to that amount, and that they were entitled to have a modern building costing that sum. They say that a building without those appliances would be absolutely of no use as a courthouse, and that the commissioners must intend to spend 'more money later on, to make those additions, at an increased cost to the taxpayers. They contend that it *195is not within tbe power of tbe commissioners to go beyond tbe said sum of $50,000, and that if they are not restrained, tbe entire fund will be practically consumed in tbe erection of a building which contains no modern conveniences, and will therefore be useless as a courthouse. There are several reasons why we cannot accept this view of tbe proceedings. In the first place, the county commissioners are not trying to spend more than tbe $50,000. If they were, tbe situation would be entirely different. They are keeping within their expenditures, and those expenditures have been duly authorizd by tbe voters of that county. Tbe question then narrows itself to this: Can tbe courts, in an equitable action such as this, supervise tbe county commissioners in tbe exercise of their discretion, and tell them tbe bind of a courthouse that they must erect ? We do not think that tbe courts have that power. Supervision of this important work must be delegated to some responsible body of men, and tbe legislature has seen fit to repose that discretion in the board of county commissioners. Section 2566, Rev. Codes 1905, reads: “Tbe board of county commissioners of any county, erecting county buildings under tbe provisions of this subdivision, shall have power to purchase grounds for a site if necessary, let contracts for tbe building and completion of such courthouse or jail, or both, and tbe buildings connected therewith, and shall have tbe entire supervision of its construction. . . .” So long as tbe commissioners are exercising this discretion in good faith, they should not be molested by tbe courts. Nor will we infer that they will later on violate their oaths of office by making expenditures unauthorized by a vote of the people, and we cannot anticipate such an action by an injunction in the present suit. There is nothing in this record to show that modern heating, lighting, and sewerage plants cannot be installed in this building at a later date without injury to the building or extraordinary costs. If the voters at a subsequent election authorize expenditures of such additional sums, we see no reason why the commissioners cannot have the two contracts so merged as to protect the interests of the taxpayers in the premises. And even should such expenditures be denied by the voters, we do not believe it an abuse of discretion upon the part of the county commissioners to heat the building with stoves and light it with kerosene lamps. It is admitted that *196at tbe present time tbe county seat of Mountrail county bas no electric light plant, no city waterworks, and no sewerage system.

Appellant bas cited tbe case of McKinnon v. Robinson, 24 N. D. 367, 189 N. W. 580, as an authority f'or tbe granting of an injunction in this case. Tbe cases are not at all similar. In tbe Richland county case the building fund bad been wrongfully diverted from other funds -of tbe county, and tbe proposition of erecting a new courthouse had never at any time been submitted to a vote of tbe people. Tbe contract bad not been let by competitive bidding, and tbe contract price was much greater than tbe total funds on band from even the illegal sources. It is true that in tbe Richland county case tbe contract failed to provide for electric lights, steam heating, and other modern conveniences. But those are incidentals and of minor importance when compared with tbe glaring defects before enumerated.

Tbe order of tbe trial court in dissolving tbe temporary injunction is in all things affirmed.