Wallace v. Boyle
Wallace v. Boyle
Opinion of the Court
The work on Third' street was done under an ordinance providing for the regrading and macadamizing of the same, in a certain and specific manner, under the superintendence of the city engineer and the committee on internal improvements. The evidence shows that under the direction of said engineer and committee the contractor not only regraded and-macadamized the street, but made a fill raising the same from 3 to SY¿ feet throughout the entire extent of the improvement. The ordinance certainly did not contemplate that any such fill should be made. It is true it usés both the terms “regrading” and “filling,” but uses thorn as synonymous. But when we come to examine the ordinance receiving the work and providing for the payment of the cost of the same, the council seems to have recognized the fact that the enginer and street committee misunderstood the meaning of the original ordinance and caused the contractor to make improvements not authorized by the. same, and this last ordinance requires the lot owners to pay not only for regrading and macadamizing but for “filling” said street. That the original ordinance did not authorize any such “fill” as that made by the contractor is, we think, clear, and in this conclusion we are fortified by the fact, that the work as done, instead of enhancing the value, is an absolute injury to the lots abutting on that portion of the street so improved, as the street is from 8 to 15 feet higher than said lots. Under the charter of the city, the council may provide for the improvement or repair of the streets of the city, and in proper cases, may have the same improved or repaired at the cost of the lot owners, but we do not conceive that the city engineer and street committee can have work done without authority from the legislative department of the city government, and that property owners whose lots front on the streets upon which such work is done, can be compelled to pay the expense thereby incurred by a subsequent ratification by the council of the action of said officers. Hydes & Goose v. Norwood, &c., 4th Bush, 464. We are of the opinion that in this case the contractor must look to the city for at least a portion of his pay, and that the property of the appellants cannot be subjected to the payment of his claim in so far as it embraces work done in excess of that authorized to be done by the original ordinance. Whilst it is true that the act of February
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.