Citation Numbers: 189 Iowa 426
Judges: Gaynor, Ladd, Stevens, Weaver
Filed Date: 7/6/1920
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/24/2022
Section 810 of the Code Supplement, 1913, among other things requires that the proposed resolution of necessity shall state “the one or more kinds, of material proposed to be used and method of construction.” The resolution adopted by the council of the city of Denison, June 9, 1919, recited that “a cement concrete pavement (7) seven inches in thickness” ivas to be laid. The city council, through its clerk, advertised for bids for the construction of the improvement in accordance with the plans and specifications on file when the resolution was adopted, which exacted that, “upon the subgrade prepared in accordance with these specifications shall be laid the concrete pavement (6) six or (7) seven inches in thickness.” The resolution also exacted that said advertisement “shall include the detailed plans and specifications,” and that, upon the receipt of satisfactory proposals, pursuant to the resolution and notice, “the city council shall, by resolution, accept the same, and authorize and direct the mayor, with the city clerk, to enter into contract in behalf of the city with the successful bidder, for the construction of said grading, curbing, guttering, and paving, in accordance with
“If it does not so conform, there is, on the one hand, no authority for entering into such contract, and, on the other hand, it is impossible to tell who is lowest bidder, to whom the contract should have been awarded. Accordingly, if the contract does not conform substantially to
The improvement must be the one the resolution calls for, and not something different. See City of Chicago v. Ayers, 212 Ill. 59 (72 N. E. 32); Heman v. Gerardi, 96 Mo. App. 231 (69 S. W. 1069) ; Bay Rock Co. v. Bell, 133 Cal. 150 (65 Pac. 299). See Section 532 of 1 Page & Jones on Assessments. Our sole inquiry, then, is whether the construction of concrete pavement 6 inches thick is in substantial compliance with a resolution fixing the thickness at 7 inches. It is well known that the depth of concrete required for durability depends largely upon climatic condition, the kind of soil, the extent and character of. the traffic, and the like; and, in the absence of any showing, we are not able to say that 6-inch pavement will not serve the purposes of this improvement as well as though it were 7 inches in thickness. If it will prove as durable and efficient in use as would a 7-inch pavement, we are inclined to the opinion that the little reduction in thickness of 1 inch, or 1/7, would not be a material departure from the “method of construction, prescribed in the resolution.” Such a resolution need not describe the material or materials of construction with technical nicety. All that is essential is that it state these in a general'Avay, leaving the details to be Avrought out in the plans and specifications. Nixon v. City of Burlington, 141 Iowa 316; City of Bloomfield v. Standley, 174 Iowa 114; In re Appeal of Apple, 161 Iowa 314. These Avere referred to in the resolution and the bidding, and the contract required to be “in accordance AAfith the detailed plans and specifications * * * and resolution.” In the absence of evidence indicating that the reduction of 1 inch in the thickness of the proposed cement concrete pavement Avould materially affect its durability or its adaptability for the purposes proposed, Ave are not ready to say that there was a material departure by such reduction from the. requirements of the resolution of neces