MEMORANDUM
On May 14, 1984 the governing body of the School District of Philadelphia, the Board of Education, voted 5-4 to award a three-year food services contract to the Freshie Company. The plaintiffs, ARA Services, Inc. and its wholly-owned subsidiary ARASERVE, Inc., allege that this contract, known as the “Satellite Meals” contract, should have been awarded to ARA-SERVE, the only bidder other than Freshie, because ARASERVE submitted a lower responsible bid. The plaintiffs contend that thе School District and the five Board members who voted to award the contract to Freshie violated the due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, as well as state law. The plaintiffs seek preliminary injunctive relief “requiring defendant The School District of Philadelphia to proceed in all respects as if the Satellite Meals contract had been awаrded by the Board to plaintiff ARASERVE, Inc.,” and, after trial, permanent relief “requiring the award of the Satellite Meals contract to plaintiff ARASERVE, Inc.”. The plaintiffs also seek an accounting pursuant to state law of certain alleged over-payments from the District to Freshie under the existing Satellite Meals contract.
The defendants, the School District, Freshie, and the five individual Board members who voted in Freshie’s favor, have moved to dismiss the сomplaint on the grounds that it fails to state a claim for the violation of the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights, and that, absent a viable constitutional claim, this Court should decline to exercise pendent jurisdiction over the state law claims. For the reasons which follow, the defendants’ motions to dismiss will be granted without prejudice to the plaintiffs’ right to transfer the pendent state law claims to the state court pursuant to 42 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. § 5103(b).
For the purрoses of determining the motions to dismiss, this Court must accept the allegations in the complaint as true and construe them favorably to the plaintiffs.
Scheuer v. Rhodes,
The specifications issued in February, 1984 for the contract at issue in this case did not require existing licensing and USDA inspection, as a result of a determination by the District’s purchasing staff that removing the licensing and inspection requirement would promote сompetitive bidding. ARASERVE and Freshie both submitted bids; ARASERVE’s bid was $502,132.07 per year lower than Freshie’s bid. The purchasing staff determined that both bids conformed to the specifications and, after receiving additional food samples from ARASERVE, recommended that ARASERVE be awarded the contract. The Board’s acting general counsel advised the Board on April 16, 1984 and May 14, 1984 that ARASERVE’s bid was the lowest responsible bid fully meeting the specifications and that ARASERVE was a qualified bidder. The Board considered these recommendations on April 16 and April 30 and reviewed tests of the food samples submitted by both bidders. On May 14, the Board voted to award the contract to Freshie.
The plaintiffs allege that the District and the Board were required by the contract specifications to award the contract to the lowest responsible bidder meeting the specifications, and were required by 7 C.F.R., Section 210.19a to adhere to thе procurement guidelines set forth in Circular A-102 of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The Circular, attached as an exhibit to the complaint, provides that contracts such as the Satellite Meals contract must be “awarded to the responsible bidder whose bid, conforming with all the material terms and conditions of the invitation for bids, is lowest in price.” OMB Circular A-102, 1111(b). The Circular also provides that “any or all bids may be rejected when there аre sound documented business reasons in the best interest of the program.” 1111(b)(2)(e).
The complaint contains five counts. Jurisdiction is invoked pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1343, 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the principle of pendent jurisdiction. Count I, against Freshie and the District, alleges that the contract was arbitrarily awarded to Freshie in spite of the fact that ARASERVE was the lowest responsible bidder meeting the specifications, and that this arbitrary award violated the right of the plaintiffs under the duе process and equal protection clauses to “the non-arbitrary determination by the Board and the nine members thereof whether ARASERVE’s bid was the lowest responsible bid meeting the specifications.” Count II, against defendants Thomas and Previty, alleges that Thomas and Previty favored a contract award to Freshie regardless of the legal merits of the bids and regardless of whether ARASERVE submitted the lowest possible bid meeting the specifications. As a result, assisted by a School District employee named Howard Cain, they disseminated false information at the April 16 Board meeting that the ARASERVE food samples were inferior to the Freshie samples. They also allegedly concealed from the other Board members their knowledge of a prior business relationship between Mr. Cain and Freshie’s sole shareholder, although they knew that this relationship prejudiced Mr. Cain’s participation in the evaluation of the samples. The plaintiffs allege that Thomas and Previty acted with knowledge of, or reckless disregard of, the fact that an award to Freshie would violate the plaintiffs’ due process and equal protection rights. Count III, brought against five Board members, alleges that they acted arbitrarily in voting to award the contract to Freshie, and knew that such action violated their obligation to act in a non-arbitrаry fashion by awarding the contract to the lowest responsible bidder; this arbitrary action is alleged to have violated the plaintiffs’ due process and equal protection rights and is alleged to have been contrary to the federal regulations governing the award of the contract. Count IV, brought against Freshie and the School District, alleges that the District violated state law by soliciting bids pursu *626 ant to a specification which stated that the contract “will be awarded based on the lowest responsible bids meeting the specifications,” and then failing to adhere to the lowest responsible bidder requirement throughout the bidding process. Count V, also a state law claim, seeks recovery of certain overpayments to Freshie by the District under the contract in effect from 1981 through the 1983-84 school year.
The plaintiffs’ due process claims depend in the first instance on the existence of an interest within the protection of the Fourteenth Amendment. To determine whether due process requirements apply to the plaintiffs’ alleged deprivation, “we must look not to the ‘weight’ but to the
nature
of the interest at stake.”
Board of Regents v. Roth,
[The plaintiff] claims that the dismissal from her job without a hearing deprived her of a property interest without due process of law. Property interests are created by state law. As the Supreme Court ruled in Bishop v. Wood,426 U.S. 341 ,96 S.Ct. 2074 ,48 L.Ed.2d 684 (1976), “A property interest in employment can, of course, be сreated by ordinance, or by an implied contract. In either case, however, the sufficiency of the claim of entitlement must be decided by reference to state law.” Id. at 344,96 S.Ct. at 2077 . In this case, we must apply the law of Pennsylvania to determine whether [the plaintiff] was deprived of a property interest.
Bishop v. Wood,
cited in
Perri,
is instructive as to a federal court’s role in determining the existence of a state-created property interest. In
Bishop,
the Supreme Court looked first to the state decisional law and, finding that it did not provide any “authoritative interpretation”, deferred to the construction of the state law given by the two lower federal courts which had considered the issue.
This Court must thus determine whether, under Pennsylvania law, the plaintiffs have a “legitimate claim of entitlement” to the property interest they claim.
See Board of Regents v. Roth,
In contending that they have a property interest as a result of the specifications and regulations governing the bidding procedure for the Satellite Meals contract, the plaintiffs rely heavily on
Three Rivers Cablevision v. City of Pittsburgh,
In explaining this Court’s, reluctance to follow the holding of Three Rivers that a disappointed bidder has a constitutionally-protected property interest in municipal bid procedures governed by a “lowest responsible bidder” requirement, it might be helpful to point out those portions of the Three Rivers opinion with which this Court does agree. First, a constitutional violation may not be made out merely by showing a breach of the provisions governing the award of the contract. As stated in Three Rivers:
Recognition of the fact that the violation of a law is not, ipso facto, a deprivation of due process to all persons affected thereby is fundamental to an understanding of procedural due process. The due process clause is a narrow, personalized guarantee which only protects against the deprivation of one’s own liberty and property; it is not a catch-all provision designed to promote the interest of society generally in the obedience of its laws.
This Court also agrees with the holding in
Three Rivers
that a plaintiff’s status as a taxpayer is insufficient “to vest in him any constitutionally-protected property interest under the due process clause.”
permits a plaintiff, solely on the strength of his status as taxpayer, to challenge government actions which might otherwise be immune from suit because no one would have standing under traditional personal interest standards. The taxpayer bringing such an action does so as a representative and in the common interest of all the taxpayers of a governmental unit.
Sica v. City of Philadelphia,
The plaintiffs’ claim to a protected property interest must rest on a “legitimate claim of entitlement” recognized by Pennsylvania law on the part of a disappointed bidder with respect to a municipal contract. As this Court recently stated in Regional Scaffolding & Hoisting Co., Inc. v. City of Philadelphia, No. 84-1826, slip op. at 9-10 (May 25, 1984):
Under Pennsylvania law it is well-established that only a taxpayer has standing to enforce compliance with the requirement that public contracts be awarded to the “lowest responsible bidder.” Lutz Appellate Printers v. Com. Dept, of Property & Supplies,472 Pa. 28 ,370 A.2d 1210 , 1212 (1977); R.S. Noonan, Inc. v. School Dist. of City of York,400 Pa. 391 ,162 A.2d 623 , 625 (1960); Conduit & Foundation Corp. v. City of Philadelphia,41 Pa.Commw.Ct. 634 , [641],401 A.2d 376 (1979). The competitive bidding procedures are designed to protect the taxpayers from the wasteful or fraudulent expenditure of public funds, and create no rights in “disappointed bidders” who are not taxpayers, [citing Lutz and Noonan ].
Accord, Sovereign Construction Co., Ltd. v. City of Philadelphia,
As early as 1876, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that with respect to a municipal contract a disappointed bidder had no right “independent of that which he holds in common with the public at large.”
Commonwealth ex rel. Snyder v. Mitchell,
As the plaintiffs correctly point out, recent cases have allowed disappointed bidders who were also taxpayers to challenge public contract awards.
See, e.g., Lasday v. Allegheny County,
... we have held that a taxpayer has standing to enjoin the improper award of a public contract and such standing is not defeated by the fact that the complaining taxpayer is also a disappointed bidder. Lutz Appellate Printers Inc. v. Commonwealth,472 Pa. 28 ,370 A.2d 1210 (1977). As there is no dispute concerning American Totalisator’s status as a taxpayer, it clearly has standing to maintain the instant action.
At oral argument the plaintiffs cited
R. & B. Builders, Inc. v. Philadelphia School District,
This Court is aware that several federal courts, including the Third Circuit, have accorded standing to an unsuccеssful bidder to challenge a federal contract award.
Merriam v. Kunzig,
Since the Pennsylvania cases granting taxpayers the right to challenge municipal contracts create no property interest in disappointed bidders, and since the existence of such a property interest сannot properly be derived from the regulations and specifications governing the procurement process in light of the Pennsylvania courts’ long and consistent refusal to recognize such an interest, the plaintiffs have failed to allege the existence of a constitutionally-protected property interest. As a result, their due process claims must be dismissed.
The plaintiffs also claim that the actions of the School District and the individual Board member defendants deprived them of equal protection of the laws, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. The function of the equal protection clause “is to measure the validity of classifications created by state laws.”
Parham v. Hughes,
The first task in evaluating an equal protection claim under the rational relation test is to “identify with particularity the precise classification alleged to be irrational.”
Murillo,
The Third Circuit has held that where, as here, all federal claims are dismissed or otherwise no longer viable before trial, the Court should decline to exercise jurisdiction ovеr pendent state claims unless “extraordinary circumstances” are present.
Shaffer v. Board of School Directors of the Albert Gallatin Area School District,
