McGuire v. City of Indianapolis
McGuire v. City of Indianapolis
Opinion of the Court
Appellant sought to enjoin appellee city from executing a contract to pave a street. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the complaint. The questions arise on exception to this ruling.
The board of public works adopted and placed on file detailed plans and specifications for paving with wear
Section 8710 Burns 1914, Acts 1909 p. 412, provides that, at the time of the preliminary resolution, the board shall: (1) “Adopt and place on file not less than four sets of detailed specifications, each describing the wearing surface of a certain hind, of the hinds of modern city pavementsthat if, prior to ten o’clock a.m. on the tenth day from first publication, a majority on the street (2) “shall petition for some hind of pavement other than those originally designated by the board * * * said board shall * * *• adopt a resolution modifying said preliminary resolution so as to include the said hind of pavement; and the said board * * * . shall * * * adopt and place on file with the other specifications originally adopted, detailed specifications for said pavementthat, after the bids are publicly opened and considered, “said board shall enter a preliminary order designating the hind of pavement with which said street shall be improved;” that if, prior to ten o’clock on the tenth day thereafter, a majority on the street (3) “shall file a petition * * * requesting that said street be improved with a certain hind of the hinds of pavement for which a bid or bids have been received, said city * * * shall have no jurisdiction or power, in that proceeding, to let a contract for the improvement of said street with any pavement other than the hind named in
Now the question we have arises under what we have designated as parenthesis “(3)” of the statute. Are the words “certain kind of the kinds of pave- ment” generic? Does the statute give the owner on the street any rights as to the materials or methods by which the “kind of pavement” is to be produced ? To answer these questions we must look to- the language used in each and all of the several steps indicated in the statute. In parenthesis “(1)” we have, “wearing surface of certain kind of the kinds of modern city pavementThis language must be taken in its plain, ordinary and usual sense. The same words are used in parenthesis “(3).” They should be given the same construction there, unless there is something in the statute to show the contrary. By parenthesis “(2)” the owners on the street are given an opportunity to require the board to specify “some kind of pavement other than that originally designated;” but the board is there required to adopt and file “detailed specification for said pavement.” So that the whole tenor of the act seems to be that the owners on the street may control the completed entity which is designated by the name of some “modern city pavement.” But the details, specifications and manner of producing that pavement are left to the board. It is the result and not the details which those on the street have a right to control. It is for the board to say by specifications what test the materials shall have. It is for the owners living on the street to say whether it shall be a brick, asphalt, creosoted block or some other “kind of modern city pavement.”
Appellant relies on Tousey v. City of Indianapolis (1911), 175 Ind. 295, 94 N. E. 225. The language of
The case of Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. Field (1905), 188 Mo. 182, 86 S. W. 860, relied upon by appellant, involved the right of the property owners to select the “material” from not less than two kinds of “material” designated by the board and, consequently, that decision has no application to a statute like ours.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Ewbank, C. J., not participating.
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