
    PEOPLE ex rel. RYAN v. ALDRIDGE, Mayor, et al.
    (Supreme Court, General Term, Fifth Department.
    December 27, 1894.)
    Mandamus—To Compel Execution of Contract—Municipal Officers.
    The common council directed a committee to advertise for proposals for certain work, and to let it to the lowest bidder, and directed the mayor to execute the contract. After relator’s proposal had been accepted, the common council reconsidered its action, and indefinitely postponed the matter. Held, that mandamus to compel the mayor to execute the contract would not lie, and relator’s remedy was by an action against the city for damages.
    Appeal from special term, Monroe county.
    Application by John 0. ¡Ryan for a writ of mandamus to George W. Aldridge, as mayor of the city of ¡Rochester, and others, to compel the execution of a contract with relator for a survey to be made by him of a portion of said city. From an order denying a motion for a peremptory writ, plaintiff appeals.
    Affirmed.
    Argued before DWIGHT, P. J., and LEWIS and BRADLEY, JJ.
    M. T. Bly, for appellant.
    A. J. Eodenbeck, for respondents.
   DWIGHT, P. J.

The common council of the city of Eochester, by resolution, directed its map and survey committee to advertise for proposals for a survey of a portion of the territory of" the city, and to let the work to the lowest competent surveyor bidding therefor, etc., and directed the mayor to execute a contract for the work when requested thereto by the committee. The committee advertised. The relator sent in a proposal, which was accepted, and the work was awarded to him by resolution of the committee. Shortly afterwards the common council voted to reconsider its previous action, and indefinitely postponed further action thereon. Thereafter demand was made, in behalf of the relator, upon the committee to request the mayor, and upon the mayor to execute the contract, both of which were refused, and the relator brought this action, joining the mayor and the members of the committee as defendants therein.

It is very clear, we think, that the action cannot be maintained. The writ of mandamus to a public officer to compel the performance of a duty which rests in contract, merely, is in the nature of an action in equity for a specific performance of such contract, and specific performance cannot be compelled of a contract of the nature of that here in question. ¡No person can be compelled, by any process of law, to prosecute any enterprise, undertaken for purposes of his own, beyond the point at which he sees fit to discontinue the undertaking; and if he has contracted with another person to do the work for him, and afterwards refuses to have it done, the contractee does not relieve himself from the obligation of the contract, but the remedy of the contractor is confined to his action of damages for its breach. The contract is not abrogated, but, in the nature of things, neither party can compel its specific performance by the other. The rule applies as well to bodies corporate and politic as to individuals, and even to the state, although against it no action for damages can be directly maintained. Such was the decision in the case of Lord v. Thomas, 64 N. Y. 107, in which the principle was fully recognized which must control this action. In that case the court, by Andrews, J., says:

“The state cannot be compelled to proceed with the erection oí a public building or the prosecution of a public work at the instance of a contractor with whom the state has entered into a contract for the erection of the building or the performance of the work. The state stands in this respect in the same position as an individual, and may at any time abandon an enterprise which it has undertaken, and refuse to allow the contractor to proceed. * * * That a person who has employed another to perform labor may refuse to allow the other party to proceed, and that the latter cannot thereafter insist upon specifically performing the contract, was decided in Clark v. Marsiglia, 1 Denio, 317.”

We think that the principles thus stated are applicable to the case in hand, notwithstanding that the duty here sought to be enforced by mandamus is the execution, and not the performance, of the contract for the survey. Nevertheless that duty itself exists, if at all, only by virtue of the contract made by the committee with the relator when the former advertised for and accepted the proposals made by the latter, since the authority of the committee to proceed further under the original resolution of the common council has been, in effect, revoked by the subsequent action of that body. We have, then, the action of the committee in awarding the contract to the relator, binding upon the city because taken under the direction of its common council; but no further action on the part of the committee, enforceable by mandamus, because that direction has been revoked. The remedy of the relator, therefore, if any exists, is, as in the cases cited, by action for damages for breach of the contract actually made, and not to compel the execution of a further contract which the city, by its common council, has decided not to enter into. We think the discretion of the court was properly exercised at special term in the denial of the motion for a mandamus, and that the order should be affirmed. All concur.

So ordered, without costs of this appeal to either party.  