Laravel best way to validate route param id existence and ownership

i’m working on a Laravel 9 API project whereby I have the following models:

  • Buyer
  • BuyerTier
  • BuyerTierOption

And each relate to one another, e.g: Buyers have BuyerTiers, and BuyerTiers have BuyerTierOtpions.

I’ve encountered a slight problem with the default Laravel validation whereby my URL already contains the buyer ID that I want to create a new tier for, but I need to make sure this ID not only exists, but belongs to my company.

How I’d get around this is to create a field in my request called buyer_id and create a custom rule like ValidModelOwnership which validates the ID and company, but I feel like Laravel should be able to do this as it’s in the URL, what am I missing:

/**
 * Store a newly created resource in storage.
 *
 * @param  IlluminateHttpRequest  $request
 * @return IlluminateHttpResponse
 */
public function store($company_id, $buyer_id, Request $request)
{
    $this->authorize('create', BuyerTier::class);

    $validator = Validator::make($request->all(), [
        'name' => [
            'required',
            'string',
            Rule::unique(BuyerTier::class)
                ->where('buyer_id', $buyer_id)
                ->where('company_id', $company_id)
        ],
        'buyer_id' => [
            'required',
            'numeric|min:50',
            new ValidModelOwnership(Buyer::class, [
                ['company_id', $company_id],
                ['id', $request->input('buyer_id')]
            ])
        ],
        'country_id' => [
            'required',
            'numeric',
            new ValidModelOwnership(Country::class, [
                ['company_id', $company_id],
                ['id', $request->input('country_id')]
            ])
        ],
        'product_id' => [
            'required',
            'numeric',
            new ValidModelOwnership(Product::class, [
                ['company_id', $company_id],
                ['id', $request->input('product_id')]
            ])
        ],
        'processing_class' => 'required|string|alpha_num',
        'is_default' => [
            'required',
            'boolean',
            new ValidDefaultModel(BuyerTier::class, $buyer_id)
        ],
        'is_enabled' => 'required|boolean'
    ]);

    if ($validator->fails()) {
        return response()->json([
            'message' => 'One or more fields has been missed or is invalid.',
            'errors' => $validator->messages(),
        ], 400);
    }

    try {
        $tier = new BuyerTier;
        $tier->user_id = Auth::id();
        $tier->company_id = $company_id;
        $tier->buyer_id = $buyer_id;
        $tier->country_id = $request->input('country_id');
        $tier->product_id = $request->input('product_id');
        $tier->name = trim($request->input('name'));
        $tier->description = $request->input('description') ?? null;
        $tier->processing_class = $request->input('processing_class');
        $tier->is_default = $request->boolean('is_default');
        $tier->is_enabled = $request->boolean('is_enabled');
        $tier->save();

        return response()->json([
            'message' => 'Buyer tier has been created successfully',
            'tier' => $tier
        ], 201);
    } catch (Exception $e) {
        return response()->json([
            'message' => $e->getMessage()
        ], 400);
    }
}

And I’m making a post request to:

  • {{endpoint}}/api/company/1/buyers/1/tiers/