12 Wash. 3 | Wash. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is a suit for injunction brought by plaintiff and appellant to restrain the city of Tacoma and its officers from awarding the contract for the city printing from October 5, 1894, to October 5, 1895, to the Union Publishing Company, of from designating the Morning Union, published by the Union Publishing Company, as the official paper of the city, and declaring invalid and void the bid of the said company, and the designation, or attempted designation, of the Morning Union as the official paper, and any and all contracts or bonds made or attempted to be made with the said company.
The complaint alleges the qualifications of the appellant under the provisions of the law and the city charter of Tacoma; sets forth the provisions of the charter in relation to the letting of the public print
An investigation of the testimony, which the appellant has brought up in this case convinces us that the contention of the appellant must be sustained. This court decided, in State ex rel. Pub. Co. v. Milligan, 3 Wash. 144 (28 Pac. 369), that—
“It does not necessarily follow that the best bidder is the person who. has a newspaper with the largest circulation, nor does it follow that because the council is required after having let the contract to designate the newspaper published by the party securing said contract as the official newspaper of the city, that the newspaper so designated shall then be in existence;” and it was stated in the opinion rendered in that case, that, “had the freeholders intended to confine the bidding to owners of newspapers, they would probably have expressed such limitation in unmistakable terms, and in the absence of such expressed limitation, or of language plainly inferring it, courts will not be justified in presuming such restrictive intention.”
Of course, we do not question the proposition urged by the respondents that where matters are left to the discretion of bodies of this kind the exercise of that discretion in good faith will not, in the absence of fraud, be disturbed. This proposition is too elementary to be discussed, and it is frankly admitted by the appellant in this case. But the testimony shows that the council refused to exercise its discretion in rela
It is hardly worth while to review the testimony at length in this case, for there is but one conclusion that can be intelligently reached from its perusal, and that is that the council refused to entertain under any circumstances the bid of this appellant and others who were not owners of newspapers. This, we think, was error, and without discussing any of the others alleged by the appellant, for this error the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded with instructions to grant the relief prayed for.
Scott, Anders and Gordon, JJ., concur.
Hoyt, 0. J., not sitting.