59 A.2d 807 | N.J. | 1948
This writ of certiorari was allowed to review a provision in the specifications for street paving in the City of Trenton. The clause reads:
"Any contractor who shall bid on any work within the City of Trenton or any work outside of the City in which the City is interested jointly with the State, County or any Township thereof, and who is not equipped at the time of bidding with an asphalt mixing plant meeting the requirements herein specified, and located and assembled ready for use within the corporate limits of the City, shall file with his bid a statement setting forth the type, make and capacity of the plant which he proposes to use in the work for which he submits a bid, giving the present location of said plant, the present owner's name and a statement from said owner in the form of an affidavit confirming the statements made by the Contractor in regard to said plant and stating explicitly that arrangements have been made whereby the particular plant referred to by the Contractor will be available for his use on the work for which he submits a bid, and located and assembled within the City of Trenton in sufficient time to carry out the requirements of the contract."
This specification is stated to be arbitrary, discriminatory and stifling to competition. The brief on behalf of Trenton states the question for decision to be "whether or not it is reasonable for a municipal governing body to include in its specifications for hot sheet asphalt paving a provision that a bidder to qualify must either have a permanent or portable paving plant located within the City limits, or else have one *334 owned by another within the City limits available for his use in the performance of his contract with the City." On the oral argument, counsel for the prosecutor agreed that the quoted statement fairly presented the question for decision.
The matter is not new to this court. In Kingston BituminousProducts Co. v. Trenton,
In considering the validity of the specification under attack, we start from the premise that the governing body of the municipality has a considerable breadth of discretion in framing specifications to govern work to be performed for the municipality. Ryan v. Paterson,
The specification under review is set aside, with costs.