Court Opinion

ID: 8765956
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 12:25:40.844781+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:01:52.852183
License: Public Domain

PHILIPS, District Judge
(after stating the facts as above). For the first time in the history of the transactions in question, in the final answer of the defendant county was the contention put forth that the contracts in question are void by reason of the fact that they were not made and the work completed prior to October 31, 1904, the time stated in the first report made by the engineer to the board of county commissioners. And the ruling of the Circuit Court affirmed this contention. If this proposition be correct, its judgment must be affirmed. If, however, it be untenable, the judgment should be reversed.
The essential object of judicial construction of a statute is to discover the legislative mind in enacting it. The first step in the analysis is to perceive from the face of the whole act what was the underlying purpose. “The intention of a legislative act may often be gathered from a view of the whole and every part of a statute taken and compared together. When the true intention is accurately ascertained, it will alwaj's prevail over the literal sense of the terms. The occasion and necessity of the law, the mischief felt, and the object and remedy in view are to be considered. When the expression in a statute is special or particular, bi:t the reason general, the special shall be deemed general, and the reason and intention of the lawgiver will control the strict letter of the law when the latter would lead to palpable injustice, contradiction, and absurdity. * * * A thing within the intention of the Legislature in framing a statute is sometimes as much within the statute as if it were within the letter.” In the Matter of Bomino’s Estate, 83 Mo., loc. cit. 441. Included in the statutory scheme of the state of Minnesota for constructing such ditches were (1) the paramount object of rescuing from waste large bodies of land and subjecting them to profitable husbandry and production; and (2) the protection of the health and lives of the people exposed to the deleterious effects of such overflowed lands. To emphasize this fact the thirty-first section of the act enjoined that “this act shall be liberally construed so as to promote the public health and the drainage and the reclamation of wet or over-flowed lands.” From the necessities of the situation, the character of the work to be done and the letting of the “job sales,” the whole matter was largely committed to an engineer selected by the county commissioners and to the county auditor. That which principally concerned the public immediately interested in the ditch was that it should be built through the designated section in the direction desired, of the particular dimensions, the cost thereof, and a completion of the work at as early a period as practicable. While the engineer in the first instance was to state in his preliminary report the time within which the work was to be done, that is a subordinate matter of minor consideration. It was important only and required for the purpose of advising1 persons who came to bid at the job sales to enable *274them to decide in their own minds whether or not they could probably complete the work within the time fixed by the engineer.
On the face of the statute it is apparent that the Legislature realized that it was not expected that the engineer could in advance fix a hard and fast time for the completion of such work, and therefore the statute provided that “he shall specify the time so far as practicable, and the manner in which the work shall be done, and for that purpose may set a different time for completing the several contracts.” The statute furthermore anticipated that at the time fixed by the auditor for receiving bids no acceptable bidder might appear; or that only a given 100-foot subdivision might be let at such meeting. To meet this possible contingency, the statute empowere'd the auditor to “adjourn such letting from time to time until the whole work shall be taken, and with the approval of the engineer, may let any one or more of such sections,” etc. “The engineer shall attend to the letting of the work and no bid shall be accepted without his approval.” It will be observed that in authorizing the auditor to make such adjournments he is not limited to any given number of adjournments, and in authorizing him to adjourn from time to time there is no prescription that the time first stated in the preliminary report of the engineer should be the outside limit of such adjournments. The object of .the time first fixed for the auditor for receiving bids had subserved its purpose when the auditor and engineer met to receive the bids. Presumptively all persons desiring to bid on the jobs would attend at said first meeting, when then and there they would have notice, by proclamation of the auditor, when the next meeting would be held. If they did not attend it was their fault, and no one can complain thereof. If there were persons, as suggested by counsel for defendant, who might at any time desire to make bids after the first meeting, they could have ascertained by going to the auditor’s office, to whom the statute committed such adjournments, whether any jobs had been sold, what remained to be sold, and when they would be exposed to sale. So that no reasonable, conceivable injury could come to parties interested in the construction of the ditch by the extension of the time.
No construction should be given to a statute that would inevitably lead to absurd results, when that can be sensibly avoided. If, as con■tended for, the contracts for work made at any such adjourned meetings for completion beyond the time specified in the engineer’s first report to the board of county commissioners are absolutely void, what would be the result? The statute provides that any party interested, ■dissatisfied with the action of the board of county commissioners in ■ordering the ditch, may resort to the courts and make contest in respect •of his property, or damages thereto; which proceeding might last beyond the time fixed in the engineer’s report. Again, the statute authorized the letting of separate contracts to different bidders for each 100-foot section. At one meeting fixed by the auditor a single job of 100 feet might be sold, and another adjourned meeting ordered for the sale of the remaining jobs, and so on until the whole should be sold. The first purchaser of a job, in obedience to the mandate of the -statute, would at once enter into contract under bond requiring the *275completion of the work to be done by him within the time specified. If the remaining jobs were not sold in time to allow the work under them to be completed within the period stated in the engineer’s first report, what would be the situation? Most certainly the contractor who had, conformably to his undertaking, completed his job and received the requisite certificate from the engineer, would be entitled to his pay. As the remainder of the ditch could not be finished within the time fixed in the first report of the engineer, according to the defendant’s contention the ditch project must then and there end after 100 feet may have been dug and paid for. The statute makes no provision for a second report by the engineer to the county commissioners, setting another time for the completion of the work of construction. In such condition, under the defendant’s contention, we perceive no other course open to the community desiring the ditch than to begin de novo a proceeding to secure it. The scheme of the statute, in our judgment, admits of no such obstructive absurdities.
As persuasive proof that the lawmakers anticipated that from the very necessities of the situation contingencies would arise prolonging the time first suggested, the act authorized the auditor to adjourn the biddings from time to time to meet the contingency of no bidders at a given meeting; when sold, the auditor was to exact the contract for doing the work “in the time and manner specified in the provisions and form of said contract,” with the additional provision that the engineer should attend to the letting of the work, and no bids should be accepted without his approval. The Legislature further anticipated that unforeseen contingencies might arise after the contractor began his work, rendering it impossible to complete it within the prescribed time; and therefore the statute authorizes the auditor to extend the time for completion, and this regardless of the time named in the engineer’s report.
Finally, as demonstrative of the general intendment of the legislative scheme, that, after the work should be authorized by the county commissioners, the time first stated by the engineer was rather directory than mandatory, being for the mere guidance of bidders at the first meeting, the statute provided that:
“If a job be not completed within the time fixed in the contract, the bondsmen shall notify the auditor in writing of that fact, within five days after the expiration of the time fixed in the contract; whereupon the auditor shall, in writing duly dated, order said bondsmen to complete said job within a time specified by him, and said bondsmen shall receive from the proper county the amount due on such job or part thereof that they have so completed, less the proper deduction for forfeiture, to be determined by said engineer: provided, that a job not completed as hereinbefore specified by the original contractor, and the completion of which is not undertaken by the bondsmen as herein-before provided, within ten days after the date of such order, or of which failure to complete the bondsmen shall not so notify said auditor, shall be resold by the auditor after ten days’ published notice, to the lowest responsible bidder.’’
From which it is manifest: (1) That the time for doing the work by the contractor is stated in his contract; (2) that having the ditch constructed was the paramount object; and (3) it was left to the auditor to fix the time in which the uncompleted work should be done *276after the failure of the first contractor. In no contingency was the matter to go back on any second report to the county-commissioners and await their approval and order.
The Supreme Court of Minnesota has recognized, from the very necessities of the situation in the practical application of such statutes, the sensible rule that, as from oversight or minute particularity in detail they are imperfect, and therefore implications and inferences may be drawn from the evident intent of the Legislature, gathered from the law taken as a whole, “from the necessity of making them operative and effectual as to specific things which are included in the broad and comprehensive terms and purposes of the law; as these inferences and implications are as much a part of the law as that which is distinctly expressed therein.” State v. Board of County Commissioners, 87 Minn. 335, 92 N. W. 218 (60 L. R. A. 161).
In McMillan v. Board of County Commissioners of Freeborn County (the same defendant as here), 93 Minn. 16, 100 N. W. 384, the petition for the work was filed in September, 1901, for the construction of the ditch. The auditor and county commissioners duly complied with the provisions of the statute, but the viewers were not appointed until December, 1902, their appointment being delayed for several months by the board of commissioners after the report of the engineer was made. It was urged that by failing to' comply with the provisions of the statute in respect of the time in appointing the viewers the board had lost jurisdiction of the case. Of this contention the court said:
“Under the rule repeatedly adopted and applied by this court in causes -involving a variety of subjects, we are of the opinion the provisions of the act of 1901, as amended, directing the county commissioners to act within a certain specified time, must be deemed directory merely, and that the neglect of said board to appoint such .viewers within the time fixed by the act does not invalidate said proceedings. (Citing authorities.) The reasons for holding this class of enactments directory are summoned up in Kipp v. Dawson, 31 Minn. 373, 17 N. W. 961, 18 N. W. 96, as,follows: ‘Where the provisions of a statute as to the time when an act shall be done are intended merely for the guidance of public officers, so as to insure the orderly and prompt performance of public business, a disregard of which cannot injuriously affect the rights of parties interested, it will be deemed merely directory; but where it is intended for the protection’ of the citizen, and to prevent a sacrifice of his property, and is such that, by a disregard of it, his rights might be injuriously affected, it will be deemed mandatory.”
No one, including the property owners immediately interested in the construction of this ditch, whose health and lives it was intended to protect, made any complaint of the extension of'the time by the auditor in the contract, but they stood by and saw the work done beyond the time stated in the engineer’s report, knowing that it had been extended ; and not until after the work in suit was completed, honestly and faithfully, accepted and approved by the engineer, and the cost thereof assessed against the designated property owners, after the county had paid for a part of it, and after this litigation began, was any question ever, raised respecting the matter of time -fixed in the engineer’s report. In our judgment, common justice and common'sense conspire to say that the statute does not admit of such defense under such circumstances.
*277Since the trial of this cause in the Circuit Court, the Legislature of Minnesota, on April 23,1907 (Gen. Laws Minn. 1907, p. 509, c. 367), undertook to pass a curative act, which in its terms would effectually validate the contracts in question. In view, however, of the doubt in our minds as to whether the scope of the text is sufficiently indicated by the title of the amendatory act, we refrain from making any ruling thereon, but rest our conclusion on the reasonable practical construction of the statute under which the contracts in question were made and performed.
The Circuit Court erred in directing a verdict for the defendant. The judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to grant a new trial, and for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.