Judges: WRITTEN BY: Paul L. Douglas, Attorney General; Mel Kammerlohr, Assistant Attorney General.
Filed Date: 11/14/1980
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
REQUESTED BY: Vincent Valentino, York County Attorney. May a county officer collect for services, supplies, and equipment furnished to the county by a company partly owned by said officer when said services, supplies and equipment were furnished without the benefit of a prior contract?
No, as to supplies. Yes, as to equipment and services as limited herein.
As you know, Neb.Rev.Stat. §
Said provision further provides ``No county officer or county surveyor shall furnish any supplies for the county on order of the county board, without contract.'
For next section, §
The sentence quoted above is clear and unambiguous, in our opinion, except for the meaning of the word ``supplies'.
As one might expect, this word used in different contexts has received different meanings from the courts.
The closest situation we have found, to that involved in the present question was contained in the case of Pattenv. Concho County, Tex.Civ.App.
On the other hand, in the case of Board of Educationv. Hoek, 183 At.2d 633, the court held that the school bidding statutes manifested the intent that the word ``supplies' used therein is all inclusive and may include furniture and equipment.
In Traylor Brothers, Inc. v. Indiana Equipment Company,
As mentioned earlier, violation of §
The Supreme Court reaffirmed this position in the later case of Anderson v. Robbins Incubator Company,
The reason for this rule has been stated by the Supreme Court of Nebraska and other courts a number of times to be that the statute must disclose by reasonably explicit language what conduct will render one liable for its violation.
Following the stricter construction, we are of the opinion that the word ``supplies' quoted from the foregoing section to the statutes should be given a limited meaning which would exclude services and equipment but include items which are intended to be consumed by the county in the ordinary course of county business. This being the case, it is our opinion that the county officer could not collect for supplies furnished without a prior written or oral contract with the county board but could collect for services and equipment furnished to the county in an amount not in excess of $5,000 in any one year if the county board has obligated the county by ratification. However, since the statute is explicit as to supplies, the reasonable value of supplies furnished on implied contract on quantum meruit would not, in our opinion, be collectable.